Interim Final Rules for Group Health Plans and Health Insurance Issuers Relating to Dependent Coverage of Children to Age 26 Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 27122-27140 [2010-11391]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 54 and 602
[TD 9482]
RIN 1545–BJ46
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2590
RIN 1210–AB41
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
[OCIIO–4150–IFC]
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
RIN 0991–AB66
Interim Final Rules for Group Health
Plans and Health Insurance Issuers
Relating to Dependent Coverage of
Children to Age 26 Under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service,
Department of the Treasury; Employee
Benefits Security Administration,
Department of Labor; Department of
Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Interim final rules with request
for comments.
SUMMARY: This document contains
interim final regulations implementing
the requirements for group health plans
and health insurance issuers in the
group and individual markets under
provisions of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act regarding
dependent coverage of children who
have not attained age 26.
DATES: Effective date. These interim
final regulations are effective on July 12,
2010.
Comment date. Comments are due on
or before August 11, 2010.
Applicability date. These interim final
regulations generally apply to group
health plans and group health insurance
issuers for plan years beginning on or
after September 23, 2010. These interim
final regulations generally apply to
individual health insurance issuers for
policy years beginning on or after
September 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be
submitted to any of the addresses
specified below. Any comment that is
submitted to any Department will be
shared with the other Departments.
Please do not submit duplicates.
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All comments will be made available
to the public. Warning: Do not include
any personally identifiable information
(such as name, address, or other contact
information) or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments are
posted on the Internet exactly as
received, and can be retrieved by most
Internet search engines. No deletions,
modifications, or redactions will be
made to the comments received, as they
are public records. Comments may be
submitted anonymously.
Department of Labor. Comments to
the Department of Labor, identified by
RIN 1210–AB41, by one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail: E-OHPSCA.EBSA@dol.gov.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: Office of
Health Plan Standards and Compliance
Assistance, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Room N–5653, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210,
Attention: RIN 1210–AB41.
Comments received by the
Department of Labor will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov and https://
www.dol.gov/ebsa, and available for
public inspection at the Public
Disclosure Room, N–1513, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210.
Department of Health and Human
Services. In commenting, please refer to
file code OCIIO–4150–IFC. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
four ways (please choose only one of the
ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the instructions under the ‘‘More Search
Options’’ tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address only: Office of Consumer
Information and Insurance Oversight,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: OCIIO–4150–IFC,
P.O. Box 8016, Baltimore, MD 21244–
1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments to the
following address only: Office of
Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight, Department of Health and
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Human Services, Attention: OCIIO–
4150–IFC, Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments before the close
of the comment period to either of the
following addresses:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC—
Office of Consumer Information and
Insurance Oversight, Department of
Health and Human Services, Room 445–
G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20201 (Because access
to the interior of the Hubert H.
Humphrey Building is not readily
available to persons without Federal
government identification, commenters
are encouraged to leave their comments
in the OCIIO drop slots located in the
main lobby of the building. A stamp-in
clock is available for persons wishing to
retain a proof of filing by stamping in
and retaining an extra copy of the
comments being filed.).
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address,
please call (410) 786–7195 in advance to
schedule your arrival with one of our
staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
received after the comment period.
Submission of comments on
paperwork requirements. You may
submit comments on this document’s
paperwork requirements by following
the instructions at the end of the
‘‘Collection of Information
Requirements’’ section in this document.
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have
been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the search
instructions on that Web site to view
public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection as
they are received, generally beginning
approximately three weeks after
publication of a document, at the
headquarters of the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services, 7500 Security
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Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21244,
Monday through Friday of each week
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. EST. To
schedule an appointment to view public
comments, phone 1–800–743–3951.
Internal Revenue Service. Comments
to the IRS, identified by REG–114494–
10, by one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–114494–
10), room 5205, Internal Revenue
Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin
Station, Washington, DC 20044.
• Hand or courier delivery: Monday
through Friday between the hours of 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. to: CC:PA:LPD:PR
(REG–114494–10), Courier’s Desk,
Internal Revenue Service, 1111
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington
DC 20224.
All submissions to the IRS will be
open to public inspection and copying
in room 1621, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Turner or Beth Baum, Employee
Benefits Security Administration,
Department of Labor, at (202) 693–8335;
Karen Levin, Internal Revenue Service,
Department of the Treasury, at (202)
622–6080; Jim Mayhew, Office of
Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight, Department of Health and
Human Services, at (410) 786–1565.
Customer Service Information:
Individuals interested in obtaining
information from the Department of
Labor concerning employment-based
health coverage laws may call the EBSA
Toll-Free Hotline at 1–866–444–EBSA
(3272) or visit the Department of Labor’s
Web site (https://www.dol.gov/ebsa). In
addition, information from HHS on
private health insurance for consumers
can be found on the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
Web site (https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
HealthInsReformforConsume/
01_Overview.asp).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Background
The Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (the Affordable Care Act),
Public Law 111–148, was enacted on
March 23, 2010; the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act (the
Reconciliation Act), Public Law 111–
152, was enacted on March 30, 2010.
The Affordable Care Act and the
Reconciliation Act reorganize, amend,
and add to the provisions of part A of
title XXVII of the Public Health Service
Act (PHS Act) relating to group health
plans and health insurance issuers in
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the group and individual markets. The
term ‘‘group health plan’’ includes both
insured and self-insured group health
plans.1 The Affordable Care Act adds
section 715 to the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) and
section 9815 to the Internal Revenue
Code (the Code) to make the provisions
of part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act
applicable under ERISA and the Code to
group health plans, and health
insurance issuers providing health
insurance coverage in connection with
group health plans, as if those
provisions of the PHS Act were
included in ERISA and the Code. The
PHS Act sections incorporated by this
reference are sections 2701 through
2728. PHS Act sections 2701 through
2719A are substantially new, though
they incorporate some provisions of
prior law. PHS Act sections 2722
through 2728 are sections of prior law
renumbered with some, mostly minor,
changes. Section 1251 of the Affordable
Care Act, as modified by section 10103
of the Affordable Care Act and section
2301 of the Reconciliation Act, specifies
that certain plans or coverage existing as
of the date of enactment (i.e.,
grandfathered health plans) are subject
to only certain provisions.
Subtitles A and C of title I of the
Affordable Care Act amend the
requirements of title XXVII of the PHS
Act (changes to which are incorporated
into ERISA section 715). The
preemption provisions of ERISA section
731 and PHS Act section 2724 2
(implemented in 29 CFR 2590.731(a)
and 45 CFR 146.143(a)) apply so that the
requirements of the Affordable Care Act
are not to be ‘‘construed to supersede
any provision of State law which
establishes, implements, or continues in
effect any standard or requirement
solely relating to health insurance
issuers in connection with group or
individual health insurance coverage
except to the extent that such standard
or requirement prevents the application
of a requirement’’ of the Affordable Care
Act. Accordingly, State laws that
impose on health insurance issuers
stricter requirements than those
imposed by the Affordable Care Act will
not be superseded by the Affordable
Care Act.
1 The term ‘‘group health plan’’ is used in title
XXVII of the PHS Act, part 7 of ERISA, and chapter
100 of the Code, and is distinct from the term
‘‘health plan’’, as used in other provisions of title I
of the Affordable Care Act. The term ‘‘health plan’’
does not include self-insured group health plans.
2 Code section 9815 incorporates the preemption
provisions of PHS Act section 2724. Prior to the
Affordable Care Act, there were no express
preemption provisions in chapter 100 of the Code.
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The Departments of Health and
Human Services, Labor, and the
Treasury (the Departments) expect to
issue regulations implementing the
revised PHS Act sections 2701 through
2719A in several phases. The first
publication in this series was a Request
for Information relating to the medical
loss ratio provisions of PHS Act section
2718, published in the Federal Register
on April 14, 2010 (75 FR 19297). These
interim final regulations are being
published to implement PHS Act
section 2714 (requiring dependent
coverage of children to age 26). PHS Act
section 2714 generally is effective for
plan years (in the individual market,
policy years) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010, which is six
months after the March 23, 2010 date of
enactment of the Affordable Care Act.3
The implementation of other provisions
of PHS Act sections 2701 through
2719A and section 1251 of the
Affordable Care Act will be addressed in
future regulations.
Because subtitles A and C of title I of
the Affordable Care Act contain
requirements that are applicable to both
the group and individual health
insurance markets, it would be
duplicative to insert the requirements
into both the existing 45 CFR part 146
(Requirements for the Group Health
Insurance Market) and 45 CFR part 148
(Requirements for the Individual Health
Insurance Market). Accordingly, these
interim final regulations create a new
part 147 in subchapter B of 45 CFR to
implement the provisions of the
Affordable Care Act. The provisions of
the Affordable Care Act, to the extent
that they apply to group health plans
and group health insurance coverage,
are also implemented under new
regulations added to 29 CFR part 2590
and 26 CFR part 54.
II. Overview of the Regulations
A. PHS Act Section 2714, Continued
Eligibility of Children Until Age 26 (26
CFR 54.9815–2714, 29 CFR 2590.715–
2714, 45 CFR 147.120)
Section 2714 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act (and
amended by the Reconciliation Act),
and these interim final regulations
provide that a plan or issuer that makes
available dependent coverage 4 of
children must make such coverage
available for children until attainment
3 See
section 1004 of the Affordable Care Act.
purposes of these interim final regulations,
dependent coverage means coverage of any
individual under the terms of a group health plan,
or group or individual health insurance coverage,
because of the relationship to a participant (in the
individual market, primary subscriber).
4 For
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of 26 years of age. The statute also
requires the issuance of regulations to
‘‘define the dependents to which
coverage shall be made available’’ under
this rule.
Many group health plans that provide
dependent coverage limit the coverage
to health coverage excludible from
employees’ gross income for income tax
purposes. Thus, dependent coverage is
limited to employees’ spouses and
employees’ children that qualify as
dependents for income tax purposes.
Consequently, these plans often
condition dependent coverage, in
addition to the age of the child, on
student status, residency, and financial
support or other factors indicating
dependent status. However, with the
expansion of dependent coverage
required by the Affordable Care Act to
children until age 26, conditioning
coverage on whether a child is a tax
dependent or a student, or resides with
or receives financial support from the
parent, is no longer appropriate in light
of the correlation between age and these
factors. Therefore, these interim final
regulations do not allow plans or
coverage to use these requirements to
deny dependent coverage to children.
Because the statute does not distinguish
between coverage for minor children
and coverage for adult children under
age 26, these factors also may not be
used to determine eligibility for
dependent coverage for minor children.
Accordingly, these interim final
regulations clarify that, with respect to
children who have not attained age 26,
a plan or issuer may not define
dependent for purposes of eligibility for
dependent coverage of children other
than in terms of the relationship
between the child and the participant
(in the individual market, the primary
subscriber). Examples of factors that
cannot be used for defining dependent
for purposes of eligibility (or continued
eligibility) include financial
dependency on the participant or
primary subscriber (or any other
person), residency with the participant
or primary subscriber (or any other
person), student status, employment,
eligibility for other coverage, or any
combination of these. These interim
final regulations also provide that the
terms of the plan or policy for
dependent coverage cannot vary based
on the age of a child, except for children
age 26 or older. Examples illustrate that
surcharges for coverage of children
under age 26 are not allowed except
where the surcharges apply regardless of
the age of the child (up to age 26) and
that, for children under age 26, the plan
cannot vary benefits based on the age of
the child. The Affordable Care Act, as
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originally enacted, required plans and
issuers to make dependent coverage
available only to a child ‘‘who is not
married.’’ This language was struck by
section 2301(b) of the Reconciliation
Act. Accordingly, under these interim
final regulations, plans and issuers may
not limit dependent coverage based on
whether a child is married. (However, a
plan or issuer is not required under
these interim final regulations to cover
the spouse of an eligible child).
The statute and these interim final
regulations provide that nothing in PHS
Act section 2714 requires a plan or
issuer to make available coverage for a
child of a child receiving dependent
coverage.
Under section 1004(d) of the
Reconciliation Act and IRS Notice
2010–38 (released to the public on April
27, 2010 and scheduled to be published
in 2010–20 Internal Revenue Bulletin,
May 17, 2010), employers may exclude
from the employee’s income the value of
any employer-provided health coverage
for an employee’s child for the entire
taxable year the child turns 26 if the
coverage continues until the end of that
taxable year. This means that if a child
turns 26 in March, but stays on the plan
past December 31st (the end of most
people’s taxable year), the health
benefits up to December 31st can be
excluded for tax purposes.
Application to grandfathered health
plans. Under the statute and these
interim final regulations, the
requirement to make available
dependent coverage for children who
have not attained age 26 generally
applies to all group health plans and
health insurance issuers offering group
or individual health insurance coverage
whether or not the plan or health
insurance coverage qualifies as a
grandfathered health plan 5 under
section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act,
for plan years (in the individual market,
policy years) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010. However, in
accordance with section 2301(a) of the
Reconciliation Act, for plan years
beginning before January 1, 2014, these
interim final regulations provide that a
grandfathered health plan that is a
group health plan that makes available
dependent coverage of children may
exclude an adult child who has not
attained age 26 from coverage only if the
child is eligible to enroll in an
employer-sponsored health plan (as
5 Section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act, as
modified by section 10103 of the Affordable Care
Act and section 2301 of the Reconciliation Act,
specifies that certain plans or coverage existing as
of the March 23, 2010 date of enactment (i.e.,
grandfathered health plans) are subject to only
certain provisions.
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defined in section 5000A(f)(2) of the
Code) other than a group health plan of
a parent. In the case of an adult child
who is eligible for coverage under the
plans of the employers of both parents,
neither plan may exclude the adult
child from coverage based on the fact
that the adult child is eligible to enroll
in the plan of the other parent’s
employer.
Regulations relating to grandfathered
health plans under section 1251 of the
Affordable Care Act are expected to be
published in the very near future. The
Departments anticipate that the
regulations will make clear that changes
to plan or policy terms to comply with
PHS Act section 2714 and these interim
final regulations, including voluntary
compliance before plan years (in the
individual market, policy years)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010, will not cause a plan or health
insurance coverage to lose
grandfathered health plan status for any
purpose under the Affordable Care Act,
as amended.
Transitional Rule. Prior to the
applicability date of PHS Act section
2714, a child who was covered under a
group health plan or health insurance
coverage as a dependent may have lost
eligibility under the plan (or coverage)
due to age prior to age 26. Moreover, if,
when a parent first became eligible for
coverage, a child was under age 26 but
older than the age at which the plan (or
coverage) stopped covering children, the
child would not have become eligible
for the plan (or coverage). When the
provisions of section 2714 become
applicable, a plan or issuer can no
longer exclude coverage for the child
prior to age 26 irrespective of whether
or when that child was enrolled in the
plan (or coverage). Also, a child of a
primary subscriber with family coverage
in the individual market may be entitled
to an opportunity to enroll if the child
previously lost coverage due to age
while other family members retained
the coverage.6
Accordingly, these interim final
regulations provide transitional relief
for a child whose coverage ended, or
who was denied coverage (or was not
6 In the group market, section 9802(a) of the Code,
section 702(a) of ERISA, and section 2705 of the
PHS Act provide that a plan or issuer cannot
impose any rule for eligibility for benefits
(including any rule excluding coverage) based on a
health factor, including a preexisting condition.
These rules were added by HIPAA and generally
became applicable for group health plans for plan
years beginning on or after July 1, 1997. Similar
guidance regarding re-enrollment rights for
individuals previously denied coverage due to a
health factor was issued by the Departments of the
Treasury, Labor, and HHS on December 29, 1997,
at 62 FR 67689 and on January 8, 2001 at 66 FR
1378, 1403, 1410, 1418.
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eligible for coverage) under a group
health plan or health insurance coverage
because, under the terms of the plan or
coverage, the availability of dependent
coverage of children ended before the
attainment of age 26.
These interim final regulations
require a plan or issuer to give such a
child an opportunity to enroll that
continues for at least 30 days (including
written notice of the opportunity to
enroll), regardless of whether the plan
or coverage offers an open enrollment
period and regardless of when any open
enrollment period might otherwise
occur. This enrollment opportunity
(including the written notice) must be
provided not later than the first day of
the first plan year (in the individual
market, policy year) beginning on or
after September 23, 2010. Thus, many
plans can use their existing annual
enrollment periods (which commonly
begin and end before the start of the
plan year) to satisfy the enrollment
opportunity requirement. If the child is
enrolled, coverage must begin not later
than the first day of the first plan year
(in the individual market, policy year)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010, even if the request for enrollment
is made after the first day of the plan
year. In subsequent years, dependent
coverage may be elected for an eligible
child in connection with normal
enrollment opportunities under the plan
or coverage.
Under these interim final regulations,
the notice may be provided to an
employee on behalf of the employee’s
child (in the individual market, to a
primary subscriber on behalf of the
primary subscriber’s child). In addition,
for a group health plan or group health
insurance coverage, the notice may be
included with other enrollment
materials that a plan distributes to
employees, provided the statement is
prominent. For a group health plan or
group health insurance coverage, if a
notice satisfying these requirements is
provided to an employee whose child is
entitled to an enrollment opportunity,
the obligation to provide the notice of
enrollment opportunity with respect to
that child is satisfied for both the plan
and the issuer.
Any child enrolling in group health
plan coverage pursuant to this
enrollment right must be treated as a
special enrollee, as provided under the
regulations interpreting the HIPAA
portability provisions.7 Accordingly, the
child must be offered all the benefit
7 HIPAA is the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104–191).
Regulations regarding the treatment of HIPAA
special enrollees are included at 26 CFR 54.9801–
6(d), 29 CFR 2590.701–6(d), and 45 CFR 146.117(d).
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packages available to similarly situated
individuals who did not lose coverage
by reason of cessation of dependent
status. The child also cannot be required
to pay more for coverage than similarly
situated individuals who did not lose
coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
The Departments have been informed
that many health insurance issuers have
announced that they will allow
continued coverage of adult children
before such coverage is required by the
Affordable Care Act. A plan or issuer
that allows continued coverage of adult
children before being required to do so
by the Affordable Care Act is not
required to provide the enrollment
opportunity with respect to children
who do not lose coverage.
Examples in these interim final
regulations illustrate the application of
these transitional rules. One example
illustrates that, if a child qualifies for an
enrollment opportunity under this
section and the parent is not enrolled
but is otherwise eligible for enrollment,
the plan must provide an opportunity to
enroll the parent, in addition to the
child. Similarly, another example
illustrates that, if a plan has more than
one benefit package option, a child
qualifies for enrollment under this
section, and the parent is enrolled in
one benefit package option, the plan
must provide an opportunity to enroll
the child in any benefit package option
for which the child is otherwise eligible
(thus allowing the parent to switch
benefit package options). Another
example illustrates that a child who
qualifies for an enrollment opportunity
under this section and who is covered
under a COBRA continuation provision
must be given the opportunity to enroll
as a dependent of an active employee
(i.e., other than as a COBRA-qualified
beneficiary). In this situation, if the
child loses eligibility for coverage due to
a qualifying event (including aging out
of coverage at age 26), the child has
another opportunity to elect COBRA
continuation coverage. (If the qualifying
event is aging out, the COBRA
continuation coverage could last 36
months from the loss of eligibility that
relates to turning age 26.) The final
example in this section illustrates that
an employee who joined a plan prior to
the applicability date of PHS Act section
2714, and has a child who never
enrolled because the child was too old
under the terms of the plan but has not
yet turned 26, must be provided an
opportunity to enroll the child under
this section even though the child was
not previously covered under the plan.
If the parent is no longer eligible for
coverage under the plan (for example, if
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27125
the parent has ceased employment with
the plan sponsor) as of the first date on
which the enrollment opportunity
would be required to be given, the plan
would not be required to enroll the
child.
B. Conforming Changes Under the PHS
Act
1. References to the Public Health
Service Act
Conforming changes to references to
sections of title XXVII of the PHS Act
are made throughout parts 144 and 146
of title 45 of the Code of Federal
Regulations to reflect the renumbering
of certain sections by the Affordable
Care Act.
2. Definitions (45 CFR 144.103)
These interim final regulations define
‘‘policy year’’ as the 12-month period
that is designated in the policy
documents of individual health
insurance coverage. If the policy
document does not designate a policy
year (or no such document is available),
then the policy year is the deductible or
limit year used under the coverage. If
deductibles or other limits are not
imposed on a yearly basis, the policy
year is the calendar year. The Affordable
Care Act uses the term ‘‘plan year’’ in
referring to the period of coverage in
both the individual and group health
insurance markets. The term ‘‘plan
year’’, however, is generally used in the
group health insurance market.
Accordingly, these interim final
regulations substitute the term ‘‘policy
year’’ for ‘‘plan year’’ in defining the
period of coverage in the individual
health insurance market.
III. Interim Final Regulations and
Request for Comments
Section 9833 of the Code, section 734
of ERISA, and section 2792 of the PHS
Act authorize the Secretaries of the
Treasury, Labor, and HHS (collectively,
the Secretaries) to promulgate any
interim final rules that they determine
are appropriate to carry out the
provisions of chapter 100 of the Code,
part 7 of subtitle B of title I of ERISA,
and part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act,
which include PHS Act sections 2701
through 2728 and the incorporation of
those sections into ERISA section 715
and Code section 9815.
In addition, under Section 553(b) of
the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
(5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) a general notice of
proposed rulemaking is not required
when an agency, for good cause, finds
that notice and public comment thereon
are impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest. The
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provisions of the APA that ordinarily
require a notice of proposed rulemaking
do not apply here because of the
specific authority granted by section
9833 of the Code, section 734 of ERISA,
and section 2792 of the PHS Act.
However, even if the APA was
applicable, the Secretaries have
determined that it would be
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest to delay putting the provisions
in these interim final regulations in
place until a full public notice and
comment process is completed. The
statutory requirement implemented in
these interim final regulations was
enacted on March 23, 2010, and applies
for plan years (in the individual market,
policy years) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010. Having a binding
rule in effect is critical to ensuring that
individuals entitled to the new
protections being implemented have
these protections uniformly applied.
Moreover, the provisions in these
interim final regulations require lead
time for implementation. These interim
final regulations require that an
enrollment period be provided no later
than the first day the obligation to allow
dependent children to enroll until
attainment of age 26 takes effect.
Preparations presumably would have to
be made to put such an enrollment
process in place. Group health plans
and health insurance issuers also would
have to take the cost associated with
this new obligation into account in
establishing their premiums, and in
making other changes to the designs of
plan or policy benefits, and any such
premiums and changes would have to
receive necessary approvals in advance
of the plan or policy year in question.
For the foregoing reasons, the
Departments have determined that it is
essential to provide certainty about
what will be required of group health
plans and health insurance issuers
under the statutory requirements
implemented in binding regulations as
far in advance of September 23, 2010 as
possible. This makes it impracticable to
engage in full notice and comment
rulemaking before putting regulations
into effect, and in the public interest to
do so through interim final regulations
under which the public will have an
opportunity for comment, but that
opportunity will not delay putting rules
in effect (a delay that could possibly last
past September 23, 2010).
Issuance of proposed regulations
would not be sufficient because the
proposed regulations would not be
binding, and different group health
plans or health insurance issuers could
interpret the statutory language in
different ways. Had the Departments
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published a notice of proposed
rulemaking, provided for a 60-day
comment period, and only then
prepared final regulations, which would
be subject to a 60-day delay in effective
date, it is unlikely that it would have
been possible to have final regulations
in effect before late September, when
these requirements could be in effect for
some plans or policies. It therefore is in
the public interest that these interim
final regulations be in effect and apply
when the statutory protections being
implemented apply.
IV. Economic Impact and Paperwork
Burden
A. Summary—Department of Labor and
Department of Health and Human
Services
As stated earlier in this preamble,
these interim final regulations
implement PHS Act section 2714, which
requires plans or issuers that make
dependent coverage available for
children to continue to make such
coverage available for an adult child
until the attainment of age 26. The
regulation also provides an enrollment
opportunity to individuals who lost or
were not eligible for dependent coverage
before age 26.8 This provision generally
is effective for plan years (in the
individual market, policy years)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010, which is six months after the
March 23, 2010 date of enactment of the
Affordable Care Act.
The Departments have crafted these
interim final regulations to secure the
protections intended by Congress in the
most economically efficient manner
possible. The Departments have
quantified costs where possible and
provided a qualitative discussion of the
economic benefits and some of the
transfers and costs that may stem from
these interim final regulations.
B. Executive Order 12866—Department
of Labor and Department of Health and
Human Services
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735), this regulatory action has been
determined ‘‘significant’’ and therefore
subject to review by the Office of
8 The Affordable Care Act adds section 715 and
Code section to make the provisions of part A of
title XXVII of the PHS Act applicable to group
health plans, and health insurance issuers
providing health insurance coverage in connection
with group health plans, under ERISA and the Code
as if those provisions of the PHS Act were included
in ERISA and the Code. The PHS Act sections
incorporated by this reference are sections 2701
through 2728. Section 1251 of the Affordable Care
Act provides rules for grandfathered health plans,
and these rules are further clarified in section 10103
of the Affordable Care Act and section 2301 of the
Reconciliation Act.
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Management and Budget (OMB).
Section 3(f) of the Executive Order
defines a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
as an action that is likely to result in a
rule (1) having an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more in any
one year, or adversely and materially
affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local or tribal governments or
communities (also referred to as
‘‘economically significant’’); (2) creating
a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfering with an action taken or
planned by another agency; (3)
materially altering the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
raising novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
set forth in the Executive Order. OMB
has determined that this regulation is
economically significant within the
meaning of section 3(f)(1) of the
Executive Order, because it is likely to
have an annual effect on the economy
of $100 million in any one year.
Accordingly, OMB has reviewed these
rules pursuant to the Executive Order.
The Departments provide an assessment
of the potential costs, benefits, and
transfers associated with the regulatory
provision below. The Departments
invite comments on this assessment and
its conclusions.
1. Need for Regulatory Action
PHS Act section 2714, as added by the
Affordable Care Act and amended by
the Reconciliation Act requires group
health plans and health insurance
issuers offering group or individual
health insurance coverage that make
dependent coverage available for
children to continue to make coverage
available to such children until the
attainment of age 26. With respect to a
child receiving dependent coverage,
coverage does not have to be extended
to a child or children of the child or a
spouse of the child. In addition, as
provided by the Reconciliation Act,
grandfathered group health plans are
not required to offer dependent coverage
to a child under 26 who is otherwise
eligible for employer-sponsored
insurance other than a group health
plan of a parent for plan years beginning
before January 1, 2014. PHS Act section
2714 generally is effective for plan years
(in the individual market, policy years)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010. Thus, these interim final
regulations are necessary to amend the
Departments’ existing regulations to
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implement these statutorily mandated
changes.
2. Summary of Impacts
In this section, the Departments
estimate the number of individuals
affected by these interim final
regulations, and the impact of the
regulations on health insurance
premiums in the group and individual
markets. Beginning with the population
of individuals age 19–25, the number of
individuals potentially affected is
estimated by applying several criteria
including whether their parents have
existing employer-sponsored insurance
(ESI) or an individual market policy;
and whether the individuals are
themselves uninsured, have ESI,
individual market policies or other
forms of coverage. A range of
assumptions concerning the percentage
of the potentially affected individuals
that will accept the offer of new
dependent coverage—‘‘take-up’’ rates—
27127
is then applied to estimate the number
of newly covered individuals. The
premium impact is calculated by using
an estimated incremental insurance cost
per newly-covered individual as a
percent of average family premiums.
In accordance, with OMB Circular
A–4,9 Table 1 below depicts an
accounting statement showing the
Departments’ assessment of the benefits,
costs, and transfers associated with this
regulatory action.
TABLE 1—ACCOUNTING TABLE
Benefits:
Annualized Quantified: low estimate
0.19 million previously uninsured individuals gain coverage in 2011.
mid-range estimate ........................... 0.65 million previously uninsured individuals gain coverage in 2011.
high estimate .................................... 1.64 million previously uninsured individuals gain coverage in 2011.
Qualitative: Expanding coverage options of the 19–25 population should decrease the number uninsured, which in turn should decrease the
cost-shifting of uncompensated care onto those with insurance, increase the receipt of preventive health care and provide more timely access
to high quality care, resulting in a healthier population. Allowing extended dependent coverage will also permit greater job mobility for this
population as their insurance coverage will no longer be tied to their own jobs or student status. Dependents aged 19–25 that have chronic or
other serious health conditions would still be able to continue their current coverage through a parent’s plan. To the extent there is an increase in beneficial utilization of healthcare, health could improve.
Low
estimate
Costs10
Mid-range
estimate
High
estimate
Year
dollar
Discount
rate
percent
Period
covered 11
Annualized Monetized ($millions/year) ............................
11.2
11.2
11.2
2010
7
2011–2013
10.4
10.4
10.4
2010
3
2011–2013
A one-time notice of right to enroll must be sent to those affected.
Qualitative: To the extent additional coverage increases utilization of health care services, there will be additional costs incurred to achieve the
health benefits.
Transfer: 12
Annualized Monetized ($millions/year) .....................
3,459.3
5,250.2
6,893.9
2010
7
2011–2013
3,482.5
5,274.5
6,895.4
2010
3
2011–2013
Qualitative: If the rule causes family health insurance premiums to increase, there will be a transfer from individuals with family health insurance
coverage who do not have dependents aged 19–25 to those individuals with family health insurance coverage that have dependents aged
19–25. To the extent that these higher premiums result in lower profits or higher prices for the employer’s product, then the higher premiums
will result in a transfer either from stockholders or consumers.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
10 The cost estimates are annualize across the years 2011–2013, and reflects a single point estimate of the cost to send out a notice in the
first year only.
11 The Departments limited the period covered by the RIA to 2011–2013, because it only has reliable data to make projections over this period
due to the fact that in 2014, things will change drastically when the subsidies and tax credits to offset premium increases and the exchanges are
in effect.
12 The estimates in this table reflect the annualized discounted value in 2010 of the additional premium costs for family policies calculated as
the product of the newly covered dependents in each year from 2011–2013 (see below) and an incremental cost per newly-covered person in
those years (see below).
3. Estimated Number of Affected
Individuals
The Departments’ estimates in this
section are based on the 2004–2006
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
Household Component (MEPS–HC)
which was projected and calibrated to
2010 to be consistent with the National
Health Accounts projections. The
Departments estimate that in 2010, there
are approximately 29.5 million
individuals aged 19–25 (young adults)
in the United States. Of those
individuals, 9.3 million young adults (of
whom 3.1 million are uninsured) do not
have a parent who has either ESI or nongroup insurance, and thus they have no
access to dependent coverage. As shown
in Table 2, among the remaining 20.2
million young adults whose parents are
covered either by ESI or by non-group
insurance:
• 3.44 million are currently
uninsured,
• 2.42 million are covered by their
own non-group insurance,
• 5.55 million are covered by their
own ESI,
• 5.73 million are already on their
parent’s or spouse’s ESI, and
• 3.01 million have some other form
of coverage such as Medicaid or
TRICARE.
9 Available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—YOUNG ADULTS AGED 19–25 BY INSURANCE STATUS
Uninsured*
Non-group
Own ESI
ESI as a
dependent
Total U.S. Population Aged 19–25 ..................................
6.59
2.69
6.98
5.75
All Young Adults in U.S. with a Parent with a Policy by Young Adult Insurance Status
Other
Total
7.5
29.5
Parents have ESI .............................................................
Parents have non-group ..................................................
3.28
0.16
2.03
0.40
5.32
0.23
5.73
....................
2.91
0.10
19.27
0.88
Subtotal A .................................................................
3.44
2.42
5.55
5.73
3.01
20.15
*The bolded numbers are potentially affected by the regulation.
Source: MEPS 2004–2006 HC Surveys, controlled to 2010 consistent with the National Health Accounts. Note: Total number of young adults,
age 19–25 is 29.5 million; the 20.15 million in this Table are the subset whose parents have either ESI or non-group coverage.
Initially, the subset of this group of
young adults that will be affected by
these interim final regulations are those
who are either uninsured (3.44 million)
or covered by individual coverage (2.42
million). The statute does not require
grandfathered group health plans to
offer coverage to young adults who
currently have their own ESI or an offer
of an ESI. For the purposes of this
analysis, it is assumed that all plans
begin 2011 with grandfathered status.
These impacts could change if plans
lose their Grandfathered status.
Of these 5.86 million young adults, as
shown in Table 3, 3.49 million are also
unlikely to switch to their parents’
coverage because:
• They are already allowed to enroll
in extended dependent coverage for
young adults through their State’s
existing laws, but have chosen not to
(2.61 million). Thirty-seven states
already have requirements concerning
dependent coverage in the group
market, although most of these are
substantially more restrictive than those
contained in this regulation.13 Using
information about State laws obtained
from the Kaiser Family Foundation,14 a
State by State profile of State required
coverage based on a person’s State of
residence, age, student status, and living
situation was developed. This profile
was then overlaid on MEPS data to
obtain an estimate of the number of
individuals that would newly become
eligible for coverage due to these
interim final regulations.
• They have an offer of ESI and have
parents who are covered by ESI (0.48
million). For the purposes of this
regulatory impact statement, the
Departments assume that the parents of
these young adults will be in
grandfathered group health plans, and
thus that these young adults will not be
affected by the provisions of these
interim final regulations. To the extent
that some of the coverage in which these
parents are enrolled is not
grandfathered, the effect of these interim
final regulations will be larger than the
estimates provided here.
• Finally, there are 0.40 million
young adults who have non-group
coverage and whose parents have nongroup coverage. Because the parents’
non-group coverage is underwritten,
there is not likely to be any financial
benefit to the family in moving the
young adult onto the parents’ coverage,
and the Departments assume that these
young adults will not be affected by the
regulation.
TABLE 3—‘‘UNINSURED’’ AND ‘‘NON-GROUP’’ YOUNG ADULTS UNLIKELY TO BE AFFECTED BY EXTENDING DEPENDENT
COVERAGE TO AGE 26
Uninsured
Non-Group
coverage
Total
(1) Young adults potentially covered by parent ESI due to state law ....................................................
(2) Young adults with an offer of ESI whose parents have ESI .............................................................
(3) Young adults with non-group coverage whose parents have non-group coverage ..........................
1.30
0.31
....................
1.31
0.17
0.40
2.61
0.48
0.40
Subtotal B .........................................................................................................................................
1.61
1.88
3.49
As shown in Table 4, this leaves
approximately 2.37 million young
adults who might be affected by this
provision, or approximately eight
percent of the 29.5 million young adults
in the age group. Among the
approximately 2.37 million young
adults who are estimated to be
potentially affected by this provision,
approximately 1.83 million are
currently uninsured, and 0.55 million
are currently covered by their own nongroup coverage.
TABLE 4—YOUNG ADULTS POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY EXTENDING DEPENDENT COVERAGE TO AGE 26
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
Uninsured
Parents have ESI .....................................................................................................................................
Parents have non-group ..........................................................................................................................
13 Restrictions include requirements for financial
dependency, student status, and age limits.
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14 As described in Kaiser Family Foundation,
Definition of Dependency by Age, 2010, KFF State
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1.67
0.16
Non-group
coverage
0.55
....................
Total
2.21
0.16
Health Facts, at https://www.statehealthfacts.org/
comparetable.jsp?ind=601&cat=7.
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TABLE 4—YOUNG ADULTS POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY EXTENDING DEPENDENT COVERAGE TO AGE 26—Continued
Uninsured
Total (Subtotal A–Subtotal B)* .........................................................................................................
Non-group
coverage
1.83
Total
0.55
2.37
Source: MEPS 2004–2006 HC Surveys, controlled to 2010 consistent with projections of the National Health Accounts.
*Subtotal A is in Table 2 and Subtotal B is in Table 3.
It is difficult to estimate precisely
what fraction of the 2.37 million young
adults who might potentially be affected
by the provision will actually enroll on
their parents’ coverage. A study by
Monheit and Cantor of the early
experience in States that have extended
coverage to dependents suggests that
few uninsured children in these States
shift to their parents’ policy.15 However,
data and methodological difficulties
inevitably lead to substantial
uncertainty about the finding.
The Departments considered two
other points of reference to estimate
take-up rates. One is the work that has
analyzed take-up rates among people
made newly eligible for public coverage
by Medicaid expansions. These studies
suggest take-up rates in the range of 10–
34 percent.16 However, the populations
eligible for these expansions have
different socio-demographic
compositions than those eligible for the
dependent coverage provisions covered
under these interim final regulations,
and the decision to take-up Medicaid is
clearly different than the decision to
cover a child on a parent’s private
insurance policy. A second point of
reference are estimates from the Kaiser/
HRET Employer Health benefits
Survey 17 which suggest that, depending
on the size of the worker contribution,
between 77 percent and 90 percent of
employees accept offers of family
policies. Again, these estimates would
be based on a group that differs in
characteristics from those eligible for
new dependent coverage. These
concerns notwithstanding, the analyses
of Medicaid expansions and employee
take-up of employer sponsored coverage
provide useful points of reference.
Recognizing the uncertainty in the
area, the Departments produced a range
of assumptions concerning take-up
rates. In developing the range of take-up
rates, the Departments assume that these
rates will vary by the following factors:
(1) The young adult’s current health
coverage status (uninsured young adults
are less likely to take advantage of the
dependent coverage option than young
adults already covered by non-group
insurance, because young adults who
have purchased non-group insurance
have shown a strong preference for
coverage, and can almost always save
money and get better coverage by
switching to their parents’ policy); (2)
the young adult’s health status (young
adults in fair or poor health are more
likely to take advantage of the option
than those in excellent, very good or
good health), and (3) the young adult’s
living situation (those living with their
parents are more likely to take up the
option than those not living with their
parents).
The almost fully covered or ‘‘high’’
take-up rate scenario assumes that
regardless of health or insurance status,
95 percent of young adults living at
home and 85 percent of those not living
at home would move to dependent
coverage. For the mid-range scenario,
the Departments assume that relative to
the high take-up rate scenario, 90
percent of the uninsured whose health
status was fair or poor health and 50
percent of those in good to excellent
health would move to dependent
coverage. In the low take-up rate
scenario, the Departments adjusted the
percentages to 80 percent and 10
percent of the high take-up rate
scenario. In all three scenarios, the same
assumptions apply to individuals with
non-group policies whose parents have
ESI—95 percent of those living at home
and 85 percent of those living elsewhere
would move to dependent coverage.
In the low take-up rate scenario, the
assumptions lead to the result that
approximately 30 percent of eligibles
will enroll in dependent coverage. In
the mid-range scenario, they result in an
approximate 50 percent take-up rate,
and in the high take-up scenario, they
result in an approximate 90 percent
take-up rate. The Departments are
uncertain regarding which of these
scenarios is most likely but are
confident that they bracket the expected
outcome.
TABLE 5—NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS WITH NEW DEPENDENT COVERAGE AND IMPACT ON GROUP INSURANCE PREMIUMS,
2011–2013
Low estimate
Mid-range estimate
High estimate
2011
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
Individuals with New Dependent Coverage (millions) .....
From Uninsured (millions) ................................................
Incremental Premium Cost Per Individual Coverage ......
Impact on Group Insurance Premiums (%) .....................
15 Monheit, A., J. Cantor, et al, ‘‘State Policies
Expanding Dependent Coverage to Young Adults in
Private Health Insurance Plans,’’ presented at the
Academy Health State Health Research and Policy
Interest Group Meeting, Chicago IL, June 27, 2009.
16 Bansak, Cynthia and Steven Raphael. ‘‘The
Effects of State Policy Design Features on Take-Up
and Crowd-out Rates fro the State Children’s Health
Insurance Program.’’ Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management, Vol. 26, No. 1, 149–175. 2006. Find
that for the time period 1998–2002 take-up rates for
SCHIP were about 10 percent.
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16:19 May 12, 2010
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2012
2013
2011
2012
2013
2011
2012
2013
0.68
0.19
$3,670
0.5
0.97
0.29
$3,800
0.7
1.08
0.33
$4,000
0.7
1.24
0.65
$3,380
0.7
1.60
0.94
$3,500
1.0
1.65
0.91
$3,690
1.0
2.12
1.64
$3,220
1.2
2.07
1.42
$3,340
1.2
1.98
1.21
$3,510
1.1
Currie, Janet and Jonathan Gruber. ‘‘Saving babies:
The Efficacy and Cost of Recent Changes in
Medicaid Eligibility of Pregnant Women.’’ The
Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 104, No. 6, Dec.
1996, pp. 1263–1296. Find for Medicaid expansions
during the 1979–1992 period the take-up rate for
eligible pregnant women was 34 percent.
Cutler, David and Jonathan Gruber. ‘‘Does Public
Insurance Crowd Out Private Insurance?’’ The
Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 111, No. 2,
May 1996, pp. 391–430. Find that for the Medicaid
expansions from 1987–1992 the take-up rate for the
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Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
uninsured is close to 30 percent, while for pregnant
women it was seven percent.
Gruber, Jonathan and Kosali Simon. ‘‘Crowd-Out
Ten years Later: Have Recent Public Insurance
Expansions Crowded Out Private Health
Insurance?’’ NBER Working Paper 12858. January
2007. Find that for the Medicaid expansions during
1996–2002 the take-up rate was 7 percent across all
children, but nearly one-third for uninsured
children.
17 Found at https://www.kff.org/insurance/
snapshot/chcm020707oth.cfm.
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These take-up rate assumptions are
then applied to the number of
potentially affected individuals
displayed in Table 3. The resulting
number of individuals with new
dependent coverage is summarized in
Table 5. Under the mid-range take-up
rate assumption, the Departments
estimate that in 2011, 1.24 million
young adults will newly be covered by
their parents’ ESI or non-group market
policies, of whom 0.65 million were
previously uninsured, and 0.6 million
were previously covered by non-group
coverage. The number of individuals
newly covered by their parents’ plans
would be 0.7 and 2.12 million under the
high and low take-up rate assumptions
respectively, with 0.2 and 1.64 million
of these individuals being previously
uninsured. Relative to the individuals
covered under the high take-up rate
assumption, higher proportions of the
low- and mid-range assumption groups
are accounted for by people who
previously had non-group coverage (72
percent and 48 percent respectively in
contrast to 23 percent for the high takeup rate group). This difference is a
result of the Departments’ assumption
for the low- and mid-range take-up rates
that people with non-group coverage
will be more likely than healthy people
who were uninsured to take advantage
of the dependent coverage option.
Under the mid-range take-up rate
assumptions, the estimated number of
young adults covered by their parents’
plans in 2012 increases somewhat over
the 2011 estimate to 1.6 million in total,
of whom approximately 0.9 million
would have been uninsured. The
increase in the estimate for 2012 results
from the assumption that as children
reach the age that would have caused
them to be excluded from their parents’
policy before the implementation of
these interim final regulations, a large
fraction of them now will remain on
their parents’ policy. Similarly, the
estimated number of young adults
enrolling in their parents’ non-group
policy increases from just under 75,000
in 2011 to approximately 100,000 in
2012, and 120,000 in 2013.
4. Benefits
The benefits of these interim final
regulations are expected to outweigh the
costs to the regulated community. In the
mid-range take-up rate assumption, the
Departments estimate that in 2011, 0.65
million previously uninsured
individuals will now be covered on
their parent’s policies due to these
interim final regulations and 1.24
million individuals total will now be
covered on their parent’s coverage.
Expanding coverage options for the
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19–25 population should decrease the
number uninsured, which in turn
should decrease the cost-shifting of
uncompensated care onto those with
coverage, increase the receipt of
preventive health care and provide more
timely access to high quality care,
resulting in a healthier population. In
particular, children with chronic
conditions or other serious health issues
will be able to continue coverage
through a parent’s plan until age 26.
Allowing extended dependent coverage
also will permit greater job mobility for
this population as their health coverage
will no longer be tied to their own jobs
or student status.
5. Costs and Transfers Associated With
the Rule
Estimates for the incremental annual
premium costs for the newly covered
individuals are developed based on
expenditure data from MEPS and vary
based on the take-up rate assumptions.
These incremental costs are lowest for
the high take-up rate assumption since
the newly covered group would contain
a relatively high percentage of
individuals whose health status was
good to excellent. Conversely, the low
take-up rate assumption results in the
highest incremental costs because a
higher percentage of the newly covered
individuals would be those whose
health status was fair to poor. For those
enrolling in their parents’ ESI, the
expected annual premium cost under
the mid-range take-up rate assumption
would be $3,380 in 2011, $3,500 in 2012
and $3,690 in 2013. If these costs were
distributed among all family ESI plans,
family premiums would be expected to
rise by 0.7 percent in 2011, 1.0 percent
in 2012, and 1.0 percent in 2013 due to
these interim final regulations.18 The
comparable incremental costs and
premium effects for the low and high
take-up rate assumptions are
summarized in Table 5. To the extent
that these increases are passed on to
workers in the form of higher premiums
for all workers purchasing family
policies or in the form of lower wages
for all workers, there will be a transfer
from workers who do not have newly
covered dependents to those who do. To
the extent that these higher premiums
result in lower profits or higher prices
for the employer’s product, the higher
premiums will result in a transfer either
from stockholders or consumers.
In addition, to the extent that these
interim final regulations result in a
decrease in the number of uninsured,
18 For purposes of this regulatory impact analysis,
the Departments assume that there would be no
effect on premiums for employee-only policies.
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the Departments expect a reduction in
uncompensated care, and a reduction in
liability for those who fund
uncompensated care, including public
programs (primarily Medicaid and State
and local general revenue support for
public hospitals), as well as the portion
of uncompensated care that is paid for
by the cost shift from private premium
payers. Such effects would lead to lower
premiums for the insured population,
both with or without newly covered
children.
For the small number of children
(75,000 in 2011) enrolling in their
parents’ non-group insurance policy
under the mid-range take-up
assumption, the Departments expect
estimated annual premium cost to be
$2,360 in 2011, $2,400 in 2012 and
$2,480 in 2013. To a large extent,
premiums in the non-group market are
individually underwritten, and the
Departments expect that most of the
premium cost will be borne by the
parents who are purchasing the policy
to which their child is added. If,
instead, these costs were distributed
over the entire individual market (as
would be the case in a pure communityrated market), then individual
premiums would be expected to rise 0.7
percent in 2011, 1.0 percent in 2012,
and 1.2 percent in 2013 due to these
interim final regulations. However, the
Departments expect the actual increase
across the entire individual market, if
any, will be much smaller than these
estimates, because they expect that the
costs largely will be borne by the
subscribers who are directly affected
rather than distributed across the entire
individual market.
6. Enrollment Opportunity
These interim final regulations
provide an enrollment opportunity for
children excluded from coverage
because of age before the effective date
of the rule. The Departments estimate
that this information collection request
will result in approximately
105,000,000 notices being distributed
with an hour burden of approximately
1,100,000 hours and cost burden of
approximately $2,010,500. For a
discussion of this enrollment
opportunity, see the Paperwork
Reduction Act section later in this
preamble.
7. Regulatory Alternatives
Section 6(a)(3)(C)(iii) of Executive
Order 12866 requires an economically
significant regulation to include an
assessment of the costs and benefits of
potentially effective and reasonable
alternatives to the planned regulation,
and an explanation of why the planned
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regulatory action is preferable to the
potential alternatives. The Departments
carefully considered limiting the
flexibility of plans and policies to define
who is a child. However, the
Departments concluded, as they have in
other regulatory contexts, that plan
sponsors and issuers should be free to
determine whether to cover children or
which children should be covered by
their plans and policies (although they
must comply with other applicable
Federal or State law mandating
coverage, such as ERISA section 609).
Therefore, these interim final
regulations have not limited a plan’s or
policy’s flexibility to define who is a
child for purposes of the determination
of children to whom coverage must be
made available.
of the Treasury, it has been determined
that this Treasury decision is not a
significant regulatory action for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not
required. It has also been determined
that section 553(b) of the APA (5 U.S.C.
chapter 5) does not apply to these
interim final regulations. For the
applicability of the RFA, refer to the
Special Analyses section in the
preamble to the cross-referencing notice
of proposed rulemaking published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of
the Code, these temporary regulations
have been submitted to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration for comment
on their impact on small businesses.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act—
Department of Labor and Department of
Health and Human Services
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
certain requirements with respect to
Federal rules that are subject to the
notice and comment requirements of
section 553(b) of the APA (5 U.S.C. 551
et seq.) and that are likely to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Under Section 553(b) of the APA, a
general notice of proposed rulemaking
is not required when an agency, for
good cause, finds that notice and public
comment thereon are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest. These interim final regulations
are exempt from APA, because the
Departments made a good cause finding
that a general notice of proposed
rulemaking is not necessary earlier in
this preamble. Therefore, the RFA does
not apply and the Departments are not
required to either certify that the
regulations would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities or conduct a
regulatory flexibility analysis.
Nevertheless, the Departments
carefully considered the likely impact of
the regulations on small entities in
connection with their assessment under
Executive Order 12866. Consistent with
the policy of the RFA, the Departments
encourage the public to submit
comments that suggest alternative rules
that accomplish the stated purpose of
PHS Act section 2714 and minimize the
impact on small entities.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Special Analyses—Department of the
Treasury
Notwithstanding the determinations
of the Department of Labor and
Department of Health and Human
Services, for purposes of the Department
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1. Department of Labor and Department
of the Treasury: Affordable Care Act
Enrollment Opportunity Notice Relating
to Extended Dependent Coverage
As part of their continuing efforts to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Departments conduct a
preclearance consultation program to
provide the general public and federal
agencies with an opportunity to
comment on proposed and continuing
collections of information in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)).
This helps to ensure that requested data
can be provided in the desired format,
reporting burden (time and financial
resources) is minimized, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
the impact of collection requirements on
respondents can be properly assessed.
As discussed earlier in this preamble,
prior to the applicability date of PHS
Act section 2714, a child who was
covered under a group health plan (or
group health insurance coverage) may
have lost eligibility for coverage under
the plan due to age before age 26.
Moreover, if a child was under age 26
when a parent first became eligible for
coverage, but older than the age at
which the plan stopped covering
children, the child would not have
become eligible for coverage. When the
provisions of PHS Act section 2714
become applicable to the plan (or
coverage), the plan or coverage can no
longer exclude coverage for the
individual until age 26.
Accordingly, these interim final
regulations require plans to provide a
notice of an enrollment opportunity to
individuals whose coverage ended, or
who were denied coverage (or were not
eligible for coverage) under a group
health plan or health insurance coverage
PO 00000
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27131
because, under the terms of the plan or
coverage, the availability of dependent
coverage of children ended before the
attainment of age 26. The enrollment
opportunity must continue for at least
30 days, regardless of whether the plan
or coverage offers an open enrollment
period and regardless of when any open
enrollment period might otherwise
occur. This enrollment opportunity
must be presented not later than the first
day of the first plan year (in the
individual market, policy year)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010 (which is the applicability date of
PHS Act section 2714). Coverage must
begin not later than the first day of the
first plan year (in the individual market,
policy year) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010.19
The Affordable Care Act dependent
coverage enrollment opportunity notice
is an information collection request
(ICR) subject to the PRA. Currently, the
Departments are soliciting public
comments for 60 days concerning these
disclosures. The Departments have
submitted a copy of these interim final
regulations to OMB in accordance with
44 U.S.C. 3507(d) for review of the
information collections. The
Departments and OMB are particularly
interested in comments that:
• Evaluate whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
for example, by permitting electronic
submission of responses.
Comments should be sent to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attention: Desk Officer for the
Employee Benefits Security
19 Any individual enrolling in coverage pursuant
to this enrollment right must be treated as a special
enrollee, as provided under HIPAA portability
rules. Accordingly, the individual must be offered
all the benefit packages available to similarly
situated individuals who did not lose coverage by
reason of cessation of dependent status. The
individual also cannot be required to pay more for
coverage than similarly situated individuals who
did not lose coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
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Administration either by fax to (202)
395–7285 or by e-mail to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. A copy
of the ICR may be obtained by
contacting the PRA addressee: G.
Christopher Cosby, Office of Policy and
Research, U.S. Department of Labor,
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Room N–5718,
Washington, DC 20210. Telephone:
(202) 693–8410; Fax: (202) 219–4745.
These are not toll-free numbers. E-mail:
ebsa.opr@dol.gov. ICRs submitted to
OMB also are available at reginfo.gov
(https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain).
The Departments assume that
2,800,000 ERISA covered plans will
send the enrollment opportunity notice
to all 79,573,000 employees eligible for
group health insurance coverage. The
Departments estimate that preparing the
enrollment notice will require 30
minutes of legal professional time at a
labor rate of $119 per hour 20 and one
minute of clerical time at $26 per hour
per paper notice to distribute the
notices.21 This results in an hour burden
of nearly 822,000 hours and an
associated equivalent cost of nearly
$21,513,000.
The Departments estimate that the
cost burden associated with distributing
the approximately 79,573,000 notices
will be approximately $2,467,000 based
on one minute of clerical time, and $.05
per page for material and printing costs.
The Departments assumed that 38
percent of the notices would be sent
electronically.22 In addition, plans can
send these notices with other plan
20 Hourly wage estimates are based on data from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational
Employment Survey (May 2008) and the Bureau of
Labor Statistics Employment Cost Index (June
2009). All hourly wage rates include wages and
benefits. Clerical wage and benefits estimates are
based on metropolitan wage rates for executive
secretaries and administrative assistants. Legal
professional wage and benefits estimates are based
on metropolitan wage rates for lawyers.
21 While plans could prepare their own notice,
the Departments assume that the notices will be
prepared by service providers. The Departments
have previously estimated that there are 630 health
insurers (460 providing coverage in the group
market, and 490 providing coverage in the
individual market.). These estimates are from NAIC
2007 financial statements data and the California
Department of Managed Healthcare (2009), at
https://wpso.dmhc.ca.gov/hpsearch/viewall.aspx.
Because the hour and cost burden is shared
between the Departments of Labor/Treasury and the
Department of Health and Human Services, the
burden to prepare the notices is calculated using
half the number of insurers (315).
22 For purposes of this burden estimate, the
Departments assume that 38 percent of the
disclosures will be provided through electronic
means in accordance with the Department of
Labor’s standards for electronic communication of
required information provided under 29 CFR
2520.104b–1(c).
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documents, such as open enrollment
materials. Therefore, the Departments
have not included postage costs in this
estimate. The Departments note that
persons are not required to respond to,
and generally are not subject to any
penalty for failing to comply with, an
ICR unless the ICR has a valid OMB
control number.23
These paperwork burden estimates
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection.
Agencies: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor;
Internal Revenue Service, U.S.
Department of the Treasury.
Title: Affordable Care Act Enrollment
Opportunity Notice Relating to
Extended Dependent Coverage.
OMB Number: 1210–0139;
1545–2172.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit; not-for-profit institutions.
Total Respondents: 2,800,000.
Total Responses: 79,573,000.
Frequency of Response: One-time.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 411,000 hours (Employee
Benefits Security Administration);
411,000 hours (Internal Revenue
Service).
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$1,233,500 (Employee Benefits Security
Administration); $1,233,500 (Internal
Revenue Service).
2. Department of Health and Human
Services: Affordable Care Act
Enrollment Opportunity Notice Relating
to Extended Dependent Coverage
We are soliciting public comment on
the following sections of this document
that contain information collection
requirements (ICR) regarding the
Affordable Care Act—ICR Relating to
Enrollment Opportunity Notice—
Dependent Coverage. As discussed
earlier in this preamble, the Affordable
Care Act and these interim final
regulations require issuers in the
individual market and group health
plans sponsored by State and local
governments to notify participants
regarding an enrollment opportunity
related to the extension of dependent
coverage. Prior to the applicability date
of PHS Act section 2714, a child who
was covered under a group health plan
(or group health insurance coverage) as
a dependent may have lost eligibility for
coverage under the plan due to age
before age 26. Moreover, if, when a
parent first became eligible for coverage,
a child was under age 26 but older than
the age at which the plan stopped
covering children, the child would not
have become eligible for coverage.
23 5
PO 00000
CFR 1320.1 through 1320.18.
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
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When the provisions of PHS Act section
2714 become applicable to the plan (or
coverage), the plan or coverage can no
longer exclude coverage for the
individual until age 26.
Accordingly, these interim final
regulations require issuers in the
individual insurance market and group
health plans sponsored by State and
local governments to provide a notice of
an enrollment opportunity to
individuals whose coverage ended, or
who was denied coverage (or was not
eligible for coverage) under a group
health plan or group health insurance
coverage because, under the terms of the
plan or coverage, the availability of
dependent coverage of children ended
before the attainment of age 26. The
enrollment opportunity must continue
for at least 30 days, regardless of
whether the plan or coverage offers an
open enrollment period and regardless
of when any open enrollment period
might otherwise occur. This enrollment
opportunity must be presented not later
than the first day of the first plan year
(in the individual market, policy year)
beginning on or after September 23,
2010 (which is the applicability date of
PHS Act section 2714). Coverage must
begin not later than the first day of the
first plan year (in the individual market,
policy year) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010.24
The Department estimates that
126,000 State and local governmental
plans would have to send 19,627,000
notices to eligible employees and 490
insurers in the individual market would
have to send approximately 5,444,000
notices to individuals with policies
covering dependents.25 For purposes of
this estimate, the Department assumes
that it will take a legal professional, on
average, 30 minutes to prepare the
notice at a labor rate of $119 per hour,26
and one minute, on average, of a clerical
professional’s time at $26 per hour to
copy and mail the notice.27 While plans
could prepare their own notice, the
24 Any individual enrolling in coverage pursuant
to this enrollment right must be treated as a special
enrollee, as provided under HIPAA portability
rules. Accordingly, the individual must be offered
all the benefit packages available to similarly
situated individuals who did not lose coverage by
reason of cessation of dependent status. The
individual also cannot be required to pay more for
coverage than similarly situated individuals who
did not lose coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
25 The number of individual insurance notices
was based on the number of individual policy
holders with dependents on that policy according
to the 2009 March Current Population Survey
(CPS).
26 Estimates of labor rates include wages, other
benefits, and overhead based on the National
Occupational Employment Survey (May 2008,
Bureau of Labor Statistics) and the Employment
Cost Index June 2009, Bureau of Labor Statistics).
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Department assumes that the notices
will be prepared by service providers.
The Department has previously
estimated that there are 630 health
insurers 28 (460 providing coverage in
the group market, and 490 providing
coverage in the individual market).
Because the hour and cost burden is
shared among the Departments of Labor/
Treasury and the Department of Health
and Human Services, the burden to
prepare the notices is calculated using
half the number of insurers (315). The
Department assumes that 38 percent of
the notices would be sent
electronically.29 Notices that are sent
electronically do not require any of the
clerical worker’s time to mail the notice.
This results in an hour burden of
approximately 259,000 hours and an
associated equivalent cost of about
$6,791,000 to prepare and distribute
25,071,000 notices. The Department
estimates that the cost burden
associated with distributing the notices
will be approximately $777,000.30 The
Department assumes that 38 percent of
the notices would be sent
electronically.31 In addition, plans and
issuers can send these notices with
other plan documents (for example,
during open enrollment for the
government plans, or other
communication at reenrollment in the
individual market). Therefore, the
Department did not include postage
costs in this estimate. The Department
notes that persons are not required to
respond to, and generally are not subject
to any penalty for failing to comply
with, an ICR unless the ICR has a valid
OMB control number.32
These paperwork burden estimates
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection.
Agency: Department of Health and
Human Services.
Title: Notice of Special Enrollment
Opportunity under the Affordable Care
Act Relating to Dependent Coverage.
OMB Number: 0938–1089.
Affected Public: Business; State,
Local, or Tribal Governments.
Respondents: 126,000.
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28 These
estimates are from NAIC 2007 financial
statements data and the California Department of
Managed Healthcare (2009), at https://
wpso.dmhc.ca.gov/hpsearch/viewall.aspx.
29 For purposes of this burden estimate, the
Department assumes that 38 percent of the
disclosures will be provided through electronic
means.
30 This estimate is based on an average document
size of one page and $.05 cents per page for material
and printing costs.
31 For purposes of this burden estimate, the
Department assumes that 38 percent of the
disclosures will be provided through electronic
means.
32 5 CFR 1320.1 through 1320.18.
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Responses: 25,071,000.
Frequency of Response: One-time.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 259,000 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$777,000.
If you comment on this information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please do either of the
following:
1. Submit your comments
electronically as specified in the
ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule;
or
2. Submit your comments to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget,
Attention: CMS Desk Officer, 4140–
IFC
Fax: (202) 395–6974; or
E-mail:
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov
F. Congressional Review Act
These interim final regulations are
subject to the Congressional Review Act
provisions of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and have
been transmitted to Congress and the
Comptroller General for review.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) requires
agencies to prepare several analytic
statements before proposing any rules
that may result in annual expenditures
of $100 million (as adjusted for
inflation) by State, local and tribal
governments or the private sector. These
interim final regulations are not subject
to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act,
because they are being issued as an
interim final regulation. However,
consistent with the policy embodied in
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act,
these interim final regulations have
been designed to be the least
burdensome alternative for State, local
and tribal governments, and the private
sector, while achieving the objectives of
the Affordable Care Act.
H. Federalism Statement—Department
of Labor and Department of Health and
Human Services
Executive Order 13132 outlines
fundamental principles of federalism,
and requires the adherence to specific
criteria by Federal agencies in the
process of their formulation and
implementation of policies that have
‘‘substantial direct effects’’ on the States,
the relationship between the national
government and States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
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27133
levels of government. Federal agencies
promulgating regulations that have
these federalism implications must
consult with State and local officials,
and describe the extent of their
consultation and the nature of the
concerns of State and local officials in
the preamble to the regulation.
In the Departments’ view, these
interim final regulations have
federalism implications, because they
have direct effects on the States, the
relationship between the national
government and States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among various levels of
government. However, in the
Departments’ view, the federalism
implications of these interim final
regulations are substantially mitigated
because, with respect to health
insurance issuers, the Departments
expect that the majority of States will
enact laws or take other appropriate
action resulting in their meeting or
exceeding the Federal standard.
In general, through section 514,
ERISA supersedes State laws to the
extent that they relate to any covered
employee benefit plan, and preserves
State laws that regulate insurance,
banking, or securities. While ERISA
prohibits States from regulating a plan
as an insurance or investment company
or bank, the preemption provisions of
ERISA section 731 and PHS Act section
2724 (implemented in 29 CFR
2590.731(a) and 45 CFR 146.143(a))
apply so that the HIPAA requirements
(including those of the Affordable Care
Act) are not to be ‘‘construed to
supersede any provision of State law
which establishes, implements, or
continues in effect any standard or
requirement solely relating to health
insurance issuers in connection with
group health insurance coverage except
to the extent that such standard or
requirement prevents the application of
a requirement’’ of a federal standard.
The conference report accompanying
HIPAA indicates that this is intended to
be the ‘‘narrowest’’ preemption of State
laws. (See House Conf. Rep. No. 104–
736, at 205, reprinted in 1996 U.S. Code
Cong. & Admin. News 2018.) States may
continue to apply State law
requirements except to the extent that
such requirements prevent the
application of the Affordable Care Act
requirements that are the subject of this
rulemaking. State insurance laws that
are more stringent than the Federal
requirements are unlikely to ‘‘prevent
the application of’’ the Affordable Care
Act, and be preempted. Accordingly,
States have significant latitude to
impose requirements on health
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insurance issuers that are more
restrictive than the Federal law.
In compliance with the requirement
of Executive Order 13132 that agencies
examine closely any policies that may
have federalism implications or limit
the policy making discretion of the
States, the Departments have engaged in
efforts to consult with and work
cooperatively with affected State and
local officials, including attending
conferences of the National Association
of Insurance Commissioners and
consulting with State insurance officials
on an individual basis. It is expected
that the Departments will act in a
similar fashion in enforcing the
Affordable Care Act requirements.
Throughout the process of developing
these interim final regulations, to the
extent feasible within the specific
preemption provisions of HIPAA as it
applies to the Affordable Care Act, the
Departments have attempted to balance
the States’ interests in regulating health
insurance issuers, and Congress’ intent
to provide uniform minimum
protections to consumers in every State.
By doing so, it is the Departments’ view
that they have complied with the
requirements of Executive Order 13132.
Pursuant to the requirements set forth
in section 8(a) of Executive Order
13132, and by the signatures affixed to
these regulations, the Departments
certify that the Employee Benefits
Security Administration and the Office
of Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight have complied with the
requirements of Executive Order 13132
for the attached regulation in a
meaningful and timely manner.
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V. Statutory Authority
The Department of the Treasury
temporary regulations are adopted
pursuant to the authority contained in
sections 7805 and 9833 of the Code.
The Department of Labor interim final
regulations are adopted pursuant to the
authority contained in 29 U.S.C. 1027,
1059, 1135, 1161–1168, 1169, 1181–
1183, 1181 note, 1185, 1185a, 1185b,
1191, 1191a, 1191b, and 1191c; sec.
101(g), Pub. L. 104–191, 110 Stat. 1936;
sec. 401(b), Pub. L. 105–200, 112 Stat.
645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note); sec. 512(d),
Pub. L. 110–343, 122 Stat. 3881; sec.
1001, 1201, and 1562(e), Pub. L. 111–
148, 124 Stat. 119, as amended by Pub.
L. 111–152, 124 Stat. 1029; Secretary of
Labor’s Order 6–2009, 74 FR 21524
(May 7, 2009).
The Department of Health and Human
Services interim final regulations are
adopted pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 2701 through
2763, 2791, and 2792 of the PHS Act (42
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USC 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91,
and 300gg–92), as amended.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 54
Excise taxes, Health care, Health
insurance, Pensions, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
26 CFR Part 602
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
29 CFR Part 2590
Continuation coverage, Disclosure,
Employee benefit plans, Group health
plans, Health care, Health insurance,
Medical child support, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
Health care, Health insurance,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, and State regulation of
health insurance.
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement, Internal Revenue Service.
Approved: May 7, 2010.
Michael F. Mundaca,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax
Policy).
Signed this 6th day of May 2010.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Approved: May 4, 2010.
Jay Angoff,
Director, Office of Consumer Information and
Insurance Oversight.
Approved: May 7, 2010.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Chapter 1
Accordingly, 26 CFR Parts 54 and 602
are amended as follows:
■
PART 54—PENSION EXCISE TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 54 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
Par. 2. Section 54.9815–2714T is
added to read as follows:
■
§ 54.9815–2714T Eligibility of children until
at least age 26 (temporary).
(a) In general—(1) A group health
plan, or a health insurance issuer
offering group health insurance
coverage, that makes available
dependent coverage of children must
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make such coverage available for
children until attainment of 26 years of
age.
(2) The rule of this paragraph (a) is
illustrated by the following example:
Example. (i) Facts. For the plan year
beginning January 1, 2011, a group health
plan provides health coverage for employees,
employees’ spouses, and employees’ children
until the child turns 26. On the birthday of
a child of an employee, July 17, 2011, the
child turns 26. The last day the plan covers
the child is July 16, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example, the plan
satisfies the requirement of this paragraph (a)
with respect to the child.
(b) Restrictions on plan definition of
dependent. With respect to a child who
has not attained age 26, a plan or issuer
may not define dependent for purposes
of eligibility for dependent coverage of
children other than in terms of a
relationship between a child and the
participant. Thus, for example, a plan or
issuer may not deny or restrict coverage
for a child who has not attained age 26
based on the presence or absence of the
child’s financial dependency (upon the
participant or any other person),
residency with the participant or with
any other person, student status,
employment, or any combination of
those factors. In addition, a plan or
issuer may not deny or restrict coverage
of a child based on eligibility for other
coverage, except that paragraph (g) of
this section provides a special rule for
plan years beginning before January 1,
2014 for grandfathered health plans that
are group health plans. (Other
requirements of Federal or State law,
including section 609 of ERISA or
section 1908 of the Social Security Act,
may mandate coverage of certain
children.)
(c) Coverage of grandchildren not
required. Nothing in this section
requires a plan or issuer to make
coverage available for the child of a
child receiving dependent coverage.
(d) Uniformity irrespective of age. The
terms of the plan or health insurance
coverage providing dependent coverage
of children cannot vary based on age
(except for children who are age 26 or
older).
(e) Examples. The rules of paragraph
(d) of this section are illustrated by the
following examples:
Example 1. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice of self-only or family health
coverage. Dependent coverage is provided
under family health coverage for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan imposes an additional premium
surcharge for children who are older than age
18.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan varies the terms
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for dependent coverage of children based on
age.
Example 2. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice among the following tiers of
health coverage: self-only, self-plus-one, selfplus-two, and self-plus-three-or-more. The
cost of coverage increases based on the
number of covered individuals. The plan
provides dependent coverage of children
who have not attained age 26.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, the plan
does not violate the requirement of paragraph
(d) of this section that the terms of dependent
coverage for children not vary based on age.
Although the cost of coverage increases for
tiers with more covered individuals, the
increase applies without regard to the age of
any child.
Example 3. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers two benefit packages—an HMO option
and an indemnity option. Dependent
coverage is provided for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan limits children who are older than
age 18 to the HMO option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan, by limiting
children who are older than age 18 to the
HMO option, varies the terms for dependent
coverage of children based on age.
(f) Transitional rules for individuals
whose coverage ended by reason of
reaching a dependent eligibility
threshold—(1) In general. The relief
provided in the transitional rules of this
paragraph (f) applies with respect to any
child—
(i) Whose coverage ended, or who was
denied coverage (or was not eligible for
coverage) under a group health plan or
group health insurance coverage
because, under the terms of the plan or
coverage, the availability of dependent
coverage of children ended before the
attainment of age 26 (which, under this
section, is no longer permissible); and
(ii) Who becomes eligible (or is
required to become eligible) for coverage
under a group health plan or group
health insurance coverage on the first
day of the first plan year beginning on
or after September 23, 2010 by reason of
the application of this section.
(2) Opportunity to enroll required. (i)
If a group health plan, or group health
insurance coverage, in which a child
described in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section is eligible to enroll (or is
required to become eligible to enroll) is
the plan or coverage in which the
child’s coverage ended (or did not
begin) for the reasons described in
paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section, and if
the plan, or the issuer of such coverage,
is subject to the requirements of this
section, the plan and the issuer are
required to give the child an
opportunity to enroll that continues for
at least 30 days (including written
notice of the opportunity to enroll). This
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opportunity (including the written
notice) must be provided beginning not
later than the first day of the first plan
year beginning on or after September 23,
2010.
(ii) The written notice must include a
statement that children whose coverage
ended, or who were denied coverage (or
were not eligible for coverage), because
the availability of dependent coverage of
children ended before attainment of age
26 are eligible to enroll in the plan or
coverage. The notice may be provided to
an employee on behalf of the
employee’s child. In addition, the notice
may be included with other enrollment
materials that a plan distributes to
employees, provided the statement is
prominent. If a notice satisfying the
requirements of this paragraph (f)(2) is
provided to an employee whose child is
entitled to an enrollment opportunity
under this paragraph (f), the obligation
to provide the notice of enrollment
opportunity under this paragraph (f)(2)
with respect to that child is satisfied for
both the plan and the issuer.
(3) Effective date of coverage. In the
case of an individual who enrolls under
paragraph (f)(2) of this section, coverage
must take effect not later than the first
day of the first plan year beginning on
or after September 23, 2010.
(4) Treatment of enrollees in a group
health plan. Any child enrolling in a
group health plan pursuant to paragraph
(f)(2) of this section must be treated as
if the child were a special enrollee, as
provided under the rules of § 54.9801–
6(d). Accordingly, the child (and, if the
child would not be a participant once
enrolled in the plan, the participant
through whom the child is otherwise
eligible for coverage under the plan)
must be offered all the benefit packages
available to similarly situated
individuals who did not lose coverage
by reason of cessation of dependent
status. For this purpose, any difference
in benefits or cost-sharing requirements
constitutes a different benefit package.
The child also cannot be required to pay
more for coverage than similarly
situated individuals who did not lose
coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
(5) Examples. The rules of this
paragraph (f) are illustrated by the
following examples:
Example 1. (i) Facts. Employer Y maintains
a group health plan with a calendar year plan
year. The plan has a single benefit package.
For the 2010 plan year, the plan allows
children of employees to be covered under
the plan until age 19, or until age 23 for
children who are full-time students.
Individual B, an employee of Y, and
Individual C, B’s child and a full-time
student, were enrolled in Y’s group health
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27135
plan at the beginning of the 2010 plan year.
On June 10, 2010, C turns 23 years old and
loses dependent coverage under Y’s plan. On
or before January 1, 2011, Y’s group health
plan gives B written notice that individuals
who lost coverage by reason of ceasing to be
a dependent before attainment of age 26 are
eligible to enroll in the plan, and that
individuals may request enrollment for such
children through February 14, 2011 with
enrollment effective retroactively to January
1, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
has complied with the requirements of this
paragraph (f) by providing an enrollment
opportunity to C that lasts at least 30 days.
Example 2. (i) Facts. Employer Z maintains
a group health plan with a plan year
beginning October 1 and ending September
30. Prior to October 1, 2010, the group health
plan allows children of employees to be
covered under the plan until age 22.
Individual D, an employee of Z, and
Individual E, D’s child, are enrolled in family
coverage under Z’s group health plan for the
plan year beginning on October 1, 2008. On
May 1, 2009, E turns 22 years old and ceases
to be eligible as a dependent under Z’s plan
and loses coverage. D drops coverage but
remains an employee of Z.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice of an opportunity to enroll)
that continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than October 1,
2010.
Example 3. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that D did not drop
coverage. Instead, D switched to a lower-cost
benefit package option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll in any
benefit package available to similarly situated
individuals who enroll when first eligible.
Example 4. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that E elected COBRA
continuation coverage.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 4, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll other than
as a COBRA qualified beneficiary (and must
provide, by that date, written notice of the
opportunity to enroll) that continues for at
least 30 days, with enrollment effective not
later than October 1, 2010.
Example 5. (i) Facts. Employer X maintains
a group health plan with a calendar year plan
year. Prior to 2011, the plan allows children
of employees to be covered under the plan
until the child attains age 22. During the
2009 plan year, an individual with a 22-year
old child joins the plan; the child is denied
coverage because the child is 22.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 5,
notwithstanding that the child was not
previously covered under the plan, the plan
must provide the child, not later than January
1, 2011, an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice to the employee of an
opportunity to enroll the child) that
continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than January 1,
2011.
(g) Special rule for grandfathered
group health plans—(1) For plan years
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beginning before January 1, 2014, a
group health plan that qualifies as a
grandfathered health plan under section
1251 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act and that makes
available dependent coverage of
children may exclude an adult child
who has not attained age 26 from
coverage only if the adult child is
eligible to enroll in an eligible
employer-sponsored health plan (as
defined in section 5000A(f)(2)) other
than a group health plan of a parent.
(2) For plan years beginning on or
after January 1, 2014, a group health
plan that qualifies as a grandfathered
health plan under section 1251 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act must comply with the requirements
of paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section.
(h) Applicability date. The provisions
of this section apply for plan years
beginning on or after September 23,
2010.
(i) Expiration date. This section
expires on or before May 13, 2013.
PART 602—OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
UNDER THE PAPERWORK
REDUCTION ACT
645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note); sec. 512(d), Pub. L.
110–343, 122 Stat. 3881; sec. 1001, 1201, and
1562(e), Pub. L. 111–148, 124 Stat. 119, as
amended by Pub. L. 111–152, 124 Stat. 1029;
Secretary of Labor’s Order 6–2009, 74 FR
21524 (May 7, 2009).
(except for children who are age 26 or
older).
(e) Examples. The rules of paragraph
(d) of this section are illustrated by the
following examples:
2. Section 2590.715–2714 is added to
Subpart C to read as follows:
Example 1. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice of self-only or family health
coverage. Dependent coverage is provided
under family health coverage for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan imposes an additional premium
surcharge for children who are older than age
18.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan varies the terms
for dependent coverage of children based on
age.
Example 2. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice among the following tiers of
health coverage: self-only, self-plus-one, selfplus-two, and self-plus-three-or-more. The
cost of coverage increases based on the
number of covered individuals. The plan
provides dependent coverage of children
who have not attained age 26.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, the plan
does not violate the requirement of paragraph
(d) of this section that the terms of dependent
coverage for children not vary based on age.
Although the cost of coverage increases for
tiers with more covered individuals, the
increase applies without regard to the age of
any child.
Example 3. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers two benefit packages—an HMO option
and an indemnity option. Dependent
coverage is provided for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan limits children who are older than
age 18 to the HMO option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan, by limiting
children who are older than age 18 to the
HMO option, varies the terms for dependent
coverage of children based on age.
■
§ 2590.715–2714
at least age 26.
Eligibility of children until
(a) In general—(1) A group health
plan, or a health insurance issuer
offering group health insurance
coverage, that makes available
dependent coverage of children must
make such coverage available for
children until attainment of 26 years of
age.
(2) The rule of this paragraph (a) is
illustrated by the following example:
Example. (i) Facts. For the plan year
beginning January 1, 2011, a group health
plan provides health coverage for employees,
employees’ spouses, and employees’ children
until the child turns 26. On the birthday of
a child of an employee, July 17, 2011, the
child turns 26. The last day the plan covers
the child is July 16, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example, the plan
satisfies the requirement of this paragraph (a)
with respect to the child.
(b) Restrictions on plan definition of
dependent. With respect to a child who
has not attained age 26, a plan or issuer
may not define dependent for purposes
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805.
of eligibility for dependent coverage of
children other than in terms of a
■ Par. 6. In § 602.101, paragraph (b) is
relationship between a child and the
amended by adding the following entry
participant. Thus, for example, a plan or
in numerical order to the table:
issuer may not deny or restrict coverage
§ 602.101 OMB Control numbers.
for a child who has not attained age 26
*
*
*
*
*
based on the presence or absence of the
(b) * * *
child’s financial dependency (upon the
participant or any other person),
CFR part or section where
Current OMB residency with the participant or with
identified and described
control No.
any other person, student status,
employment, or any combination of
those factors. In addition, a plan or
*
*
*
*
*
54.9815–2714T .......................
1545–2172 issuer may not deny or restrict coverage
of a child based on eligibility for other
*
*
*
*
*
coverage, except that paragraph (g) of
this section provides a special rule for
Employee Benefits Security
plan years beginning before January 1,
Administration
2014 for grandfathered health plans that
are group health plans. (Other
29 CFR Chapter XXV
requirements of Federal or State law,
■ 29 CFR Part 2590 is amended as
including section 609 of ERISA or
follows:
section 1908 of the Social Security Act,
may mandate coverage of certain
PART 2590—RULES AND
children.)
REGULATIONS FOR GROUP HEALTH
(c) Coverage of grandchildren not
PLANS
required. Nothing in this section
■ 1. The authority citation for Part 2590
requires a plan or issuer to make
is revised to read as follows:
coverage available for the child of a
child receiving dependent coverage.
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1027, 1059, 1135,
(d) Uniformity irrespective of age. The
1161–1168, 1169, 1181–1183, 1181 note,
terms of the plan or health insurance
1185, 1185a, 1185b, 1191, 1191a, 1191b, and
coverage providing dependent coverage
1191c; sec. 101(g), Pub. L.104–191, 110 Stat.
1936; sec. 401(b), Pub. L. 105–200, 112 Stat.
of children cannot vary based on age
Par. 5. The authority citation for part
602 continues to read as follows:
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■
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(f) Transitional rules for individuals
whose coverage ended by reason of
reaching a dependent eligibility
threshold—(1) In general. The relief
provided in the transitional rules of this
paragraph (f) applies with respect to any
child—
(i) Whose coverage ended, or who was
denied coverage (or was not eligible for
coverage) under a group health plan or
group health insurance coverage
because, under the terms of the plan or
coverage, the availability of dependent
coverage of children ended before the
attainment of age 26 (which, under this
section, is no longer permissible); and
(ii) Who becomes eligible (or is
required to become eligible) for coverage
under a group health plan or group
health insurance coverage on the first
day of the first plan year beginning on
or after September 23, 2010 by reason of
the application of this section.
(2) Opportunity to enroll required—(i)
If a group health plan, or group health
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insurance coverage, in which a child
described in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section is eligible to enroll (or is
required to become eligible to enroll) is
the plan or coverage in which the
child’s coverage ended (or did not
begin) for the reasons described in
paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section, and if
the plan, or the issuer of such coverage,
is subject to the requirements of this
section, the plan and the issuer are
required to give the child an
opportunity to enroll that continues for
at least 30 days (including written
notice of the opportunity to enroll). This
opportunity (including the written
notice) must be provided beginning not
later than the first day of the first plan
year beginning on or after September 23,
2010.
(ii) The written notice must include a
statement that children whose coverage
ended, or who were denied coverage (or
were not eligible for coverage), because
the availability of dependent coverage of
children ended before attainment of age
26 are eligible to enroll in the plan or
coverage. The notice may be provided to
an employee on behalf of the
employee’s child. In addition, the notice
may be included with other enrollment
materials that a plan distributes to
employees, provided the statement is
prominent. If a notice satisfying the
requirements of this paragraph (f)(2) is
provided to an employee whose child is
entitled to an enrollment opportunity
under this paragraph (f), the obligation
to provide the notice of enrollment
opportunity under this paragraph (f)(2)
with respect to that child is satisfied for
both the plan and the issuer.
(3) Effective date of coverage. In the
case of an individual who enrolls under
paragraph (f)(2) of this section, coverage
must take effect not later than the first
day of the first plan year beginning on
or after September 23, 2010.
(4) Treatment of enrollees in a group
health plan. Any child enrolling in a
group health plan pursuant to paragraph
(f)(2) of this section must be treated as
if the child were a special enrollee, as
provided under the rules of § 2590.701–
6(d) of this Part. Accordingly, the child
(and, if the child would not be a
participant once enrolled in the plan,
the participant through whom the child
is otherwise eligible for coverage under
the plan) must be offered all the benefit
packages available to similarly situated
individuals who did not lose coverage
by reason of cessation of dependent
status. For this purpose, any difference
in benefits or cost-sharing requirements
constitutes a different benefit package.
The child also cannot be required to pay
more for coverage than similarly
situated individuals who did not lose
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16:19 May 12, 2010
Jkt 220001
coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
(5) Examples. The rules of this
paragraph (f) are illustrated by the
following examples:
Example 1. (i) Facts. Employer Y maintains
a group health plan with a calendar year plan
year. The plan has a single benefit package.
For the 2010 plan year, the plan allows
children of employees to be covered under
the plan until age 19, or until age 23 for
children who are full-time students.
Individual B, an employee of Y, and
Individual C, B’s child and a full-time
student, were enrolled in Y’s group health
plan at the beginning of the 2010 plan year.
On June 10, 2010, C turns 23 years old and
loses dependent coverage under Y’s plan. On
or before January 1, 2011, Y’s group health
plan gives B written notice that individuals
who lost coverage by reason of ceasing to be
a dependent before attainment of age 26 are
eligible to enroll in the plan, and that
individuals may request enrollment for such
children through February 14, 2011 with
enrollment effective retroactively to January
1, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
has complied with the requirements of this
paragraph (f) by providing an enrollment
opportunity to C that lasts at least 30 days.
Example 2. (i) Facts. Employer Z maintains
a group health plan with a plan year
beginning October 1 and ending September
30. Prior to October 1, 2010, the group health
plan allows children of employees to be
covered under the plan until age 22.
Individual D, an employee of Z, and
Individual E, D’s child, are enrolled in family
coverage under Z’s group health plan for the
plan year beginning on October 1, 2008. On
May 1, 2009, E turns 22 years old and ceases
to be eligible as a dependent under Z’s plan
and loses coverage. D drops coverage but
remains an employee of Z.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice of an opportunity to enroll)
that continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than October 1,
2010.
Example 3. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that D did not drop
coverage. Instead, D switched to a lower-cost
benefit package option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll in any
benefit package available to similarly situated
individuals who enroll when first eligible.
Example 4. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that E elected COBRA
continuation coverage.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 4, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll other than
as a COBRA qualified beneficiary (and must
provide, by that date, written notice of the
opportunity to enroll) that continues for at
least 30 days, with enrollment effective not
later than October 1, 2010.
Example 5. (i) Facts. Employer X maintains
a group health plan with a calendar year plan
year. Prior to 2011, the plan allows children
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27137
of employees to be covered under the plan
until the child attains age 22. During the
2009 plan year, an individual with a 22-year
old child joins the plan; the child is denied
coverage because the child is 22.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 5,
notwithstanding that the child was not
previously covered under the plan, the plan
must provide the child, not later than January
1, 2011, an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice to the employee of an
opportunity to enroll the child) that
continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than January 1,
2011.
(g) Special rule for grandfathered
group health plans—(1) For plan years
beginning before January 1, 2014, a
group health plan that qualifies as a
grandfathered health plan under section
1251 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act and that makes
available dependent coverage of
children may exclude an adult child
who has not attained age 26 from
coverage only if the adult child is
eligible to enroll in an eligible
employer-sponsored health plan (as
defined in section 5000A(f)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code) other than a
group health plan of a parent.
(2) For plan years beginning on or
after January 1, 2014, a group health
plan that qualifies as a grandfathered
health plan under section 1251 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act must comply with the requirements
of paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section.
(h) Applicability date. The provisions
of this section apply for plan years
beginning on or after September 23,
2010.
Department of Health and Human
Services
45 CFR Subtitle A
For reasons set forth in the preamble,
the Department of Health and Human
Services is amending 45 CFR Subtitle A,
Subchapter B as follows:
■
PART 144—REQUIREMENTS
RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE
COVERAGE
Subpart A—General Provisions
1. Section 144.101 is amended byA. Revising paragraph (a).
B. Redesignating paragraphs (b), (c)
and (d) as paragraphs (c), (d) and (e),
respectively.
■ C. Adding a new paragraph (b).
■ D. Revising the first sentence of newly
redesignated paragraph (c).
■ E. Amending newly redesignated
paragraph (d) by removing ‘‘2722’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘2723’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
■
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§ 144.101
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Basis and purpose.
(a) Part 146 of this subchapter
implements requirements of Title XXVII
of the Public Health Service Act (PHS
Act, 42 U.S.C. 300gg, et seq.) that apply
to group health plans and group health
insurance issuers.
(b) Part 147 of this subchapter
implements the provisions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act that
apply to both group health plans and
health insurance issuers in the Group
and Individual Markets.
(c) Part 148 of this subchapter
implements Individual Health Insurance
Market requirements of the PHS Act.
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 2. Section 144.103 is amended by
adding the definition of ‘‘Policy Year’’ to
read as follows:
§ 144.103
Defintions.
*
*
*
*
*
Policy Year means in the individual
health insurance market the 12-month
period that is designated as the policy
year in the policy documents of the
individual health insurance coverage. If
there is no designation of a policy year
in the policy document (or no such
policy document is available), then the
policy year is the deductible or limit
year used under the coverage. If
deductibles or other limits are not
imposed on a yearly basis, the policy
year is the calendar year.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 146—REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE
MARKET
3. Section 146.101 is amended by—
A. Revising the first sentence of
paragraph (a).
■ B. Revising paragraph (b)(4).
The revisions read as follows:
■
■
§ 146.101
Basis and Scope.
(a) Statutory basis. This part
implements the Group Market
requirements of the PHS Act.* * *
(b) * * *
(4) Subpart E. Subpart E of this part
implements requirements relating to
group health plans and issuers in the
Group Health Insurance Market.
*
*
*
*
*
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
§ 146.115
[Amended]
4. Section 146.115 is amended by
removing ‘‘2721(b)’’ wherever it appears
in paragraph (a)(6) and adding in its
place ‘‘2722(a)’’.
■
§ 146.130
[Amended]
5. Section 146.130 is amended by—
A. Removing ‘‘2704’’ wherever it
appears in paragraphs (e) and (f),
■
■
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:19 May 12, 2010
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including the examples in paragraph
(e)(4), and adding in its place ‘‘2725’’.
■ B. Removing ‘‘2723’’ wherever it
appears in paragraph (e)(3), including
the paragraph heading, and adding in its
place ‘‘2724’’.
■ 6. A new Part 147 is added to read as
follows:
PART 147—HEALTH INSURANCE
REFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL HEALTH
INSURANCE MARKETS
Authority: Secs 2701 through 2763, 2791,
and 2792 of the Public Health Service Act (42
USC 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91, and
300gg–92), as amended.
§ 147.100
Basis and scope.
Part 147 of this subchapter
implements the requirements of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act that apply to group health plans and
health insurance issuers in the Group
and Individual markets.
§ 147.120 Eligibility of children until at
least age 26.
(a) In general—(1) A group health
plan, or a health insurance issuer
offering group or individual health
insurance coverage, that makes available
dependent coverage of children must
make such coverage available for
children until attainment of 26 years of
age.
(2) The rule of this paragraph (a) is
illustrated by the following example:
Example. (i) Facts. For the plan year
beginning January 1, 2011, a group health
plan provides health coverage for employees,
employees’ spouses, and employees’ children
until the child turns 26. On the birthday of
a child of an employee, July 17, 2011, the
child turns 26. The last day the plan covers
the child is July 16, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example, the plan
satisfies the requirement of this paragraph (a)
with respect to the child.
(b) Restrictions on plan definition of
dependent. With respect to a child who
has not attained age 26, a plan or issuer
may not define dependent for purposes
of eligibility for dependent coverage of
children other than in terms of a
relationship between a child and the
participant (in the individual market,
the primary subscriber). Thus, for
example, a plan or issuer may not deny
or restrict coverage for a child who has
not attained age 26 based on the
presence or absence of the child’s
financial dependency (upon the
participant or primary subscriber, or any
other person), residency with the
participant (in the individual market,
the primary subscriber) or with any
other person, student status,
employment, or any combination of
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
those factors. In addition, a plan or
issuer may not deny or restrict coverage
of a child based on eligibility for other
coverage, except that paragraph (g) of
this section provides a special rule for
plan years beginning before January 1,
2014 for grandfathered health plans that
are group health plans. (Other
requirements of Federal or State law,
including section 609 of ERISA or
section 1908 of the Social Security Act,
may mandate coverage of certain
children.)
(c) Coverage of grandchildren not
required. Nothing in this section
requires a plan or issuer to make
coverage available for the child of a
child receiving dependent coverage.
(d) Uniformity irrespective of age. The
terms of the plan or health insurance
coverage providing dependent coverage
of children cannot vary based on age
(except for children who are age 26 or
older).
(e) Examples. The rules of paragraph
(d) of this section are illustrated by the
following examples:
Example 1. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice of self-only or family health
coverage. Dependent coverage is provided
under family health coverage for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan imposes an additional premium
surcharge for children who are older than age
18.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan varies the terms
for dependent coverage of children based on
age.
Example 2. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers a choice among the following tiers of
health coverage: Self-only, self-plus-one, selfplus-two, and self-plus-three-or-more. The
cost of coverage increases based on the
number of covered individuals. The plan
provides dependent coverage of children
who have not attained age 26.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, the plan
does not violate the requirement of paragraph
(d) of this section that the terms of dependent
coverage for children not vary based on age.
Although the cost of coverage increases for
tiers with more covered individuals, the
increase applies without regard to the age of
any child.
Example 3. (i) Facts. A group health plan
offers two benefit packages—an HMO option
and an indemnity option. Dependent
coverage is provided for children of
participants who have not attained age 26.
The plan limits children who are older than
age 18 to the HMO option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, the plan
violates the requirement of paragraph (d) of
this section because the plan, by limiting
children who are older than age 18 to the
HMO option, varies the terms for dependent
coverage of children based on age.
(f) Transitional rules for individuals
whose coverage ended by reason of
reaching a dependent eligibility
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srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
threshold—(1) In general. The relief
provided in the transitional rules of this
paragraph (f) applies with respect to any
child—
(i) Whose coverage ended, or who was
denied coverage (or was not eligible for
coverage) under a group health plan or
group or individual health insurance
coverage because, under the terms of the
plan or coverage, the availability of
dependent coverage of children ended
before the attainment of age 26 (which,
under this section, is no longer
permissible); and
(ii) Who becomes eligible (or is
required to become eligible) for coverage
under a group health plan or group or
individual health insurance coverage on
the first day of the first plan year (in the
individual market, the first day of the
first policy year) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010 by reason of the
application of this section.
(2) Opportunity to enroll required—(i)
If a group health plan, or group or
individual health insurance coverage, in
which a child described in paragraph
(f)(1) of this section is eligible to enroll
(or is required to become eligible to
enroll) is the plan or coverage in which
the child’s coverage ended (or did not
begin) for the reasons described in
paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section, and if
the plan, or the issuer of such coverage,
is subject to the requirements of this
section, the plan and the issuer are
required to give the child an
opportunity to enroll that continues for
at least 30 days (including written
notice of the opportunity to enroll). This
opportunity (including the written
notice) must be provided beginning not
later than the first day of the first plan
year (in the individual market, the first
day of the first policy year) beginning on
or after September 23, 2010.
(ii) The written notice must include a
statement that children whose coverage
ended, or who were denied coverage (or
were not eligible for coverage), because
the availability of dependent coverage of
children ended before attainment of age
26 are eligible to enroll in the plan or
coverage. The notice may be provided to
an employee on behalf of the
employee’s child (in the individual
market, to the primary subscriber on
behalf of the primary subscriber’s child).
In addition, for a group health plan or
group health insurance coverage, the
notice may be included with other
enrollment materials that a plan
distributes to employees, provided the
statement is prominent. For a group
health plan or group health insurance
coverage, if a notice satisfying the
requirements of this paragraph (f)(2) is
provided to an employee whose child is
entitled to an enrollment opportunity
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16:19 May 12, 2010
Jkt 220001
under this paragraph (f), the obligation
to provide the notice of enrollment
opportunity under this paragraph (f)(2)
with respect to that child is satisfied for
both the plan and the issuer.
(3) Effective date of coverage. In the
case of an individual who enrolls under
paragraph (f)(2) of this section, coverage
must take effect not later than the first
day of the first plan year (in the
individual market, the first day of the
first policy year) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010.
(4) Treatment of enrollees in a group
health plan. For purposes of this Part,
any child enrolling in a group health
plan pursuant to paragraph (f)(2) of this
section must be treated as if the child
were a special enrollee, as provided
under the rules of 45 CFR 146.117(d).
Accordingly, the child (and, if the child
would not be a participant once
enrolled in the plan, the participant
through whom the child is otherwise
eligible for coverage under the plan)
must be offered all the benefit packages
available to similarly situated
individuals who did not lose coverage
by reason of cessation of dependent
status. For this purpose, any difference
in benefits or cost-sharing requirements
constitutes a different benefit package.
The child also cannot be required to pay
more for coverage than similarly
situated individuals who did not lose
coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status.
(5) Examples. The rules of this
paragraph (f) are illustrated by the
following examples:
Example 1. (i) Facts. Employer Y maintains
a group health plan with a calendar year plan
year. The plan has a single benefit package.
For the 2010 plan year, the plan allows
children of employees to be covered under
the plan until age 19, or until age 23 for
children who are full-time students.
Individual B, an employee of Y, and
Individual C, B’s child and a full-time
student, were enrolled in Y’s group health
plan at the beginning of the 2010 plan year.
On June 10, 2010, C turns 23 years old and
loses dependent coverage under Y’s plan. On
or before January 1, 2011, Y’s group health
plan gives B written notice that individuals
who lost coverage by reason of ceasing to be
a dependent before attainment of age 26 are
eligible to enroll in the plan, and that
individuals may request enrollment for such
children through February 14, 2011 with
enrollment effective retroactively to January
1, 2011.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, the plan
has complied with the requirements of this
paragraph (f) by providing an enrollment
opportunity to C that lasts at least 30 days.
Example 2. (i) Facts. Employer Z maintains
a group health plan with a plan year
beginning October 1 and ending September
30. Prior to October 1, 2010, the group health
plan allows children of employees to be
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27139
covered under the plan until age 22.
Individual D, an employee of Z, and
Individual E, D’s child, are enrolled in family
coverage under Z’s group health plan for the
plan year beginning on October 1, 2008. On
May 1, 2009, E turns 22 years old and ceases
to be eligible as a dependent under Z’s plan
and loses coverage. D drops coverage but
remains an employee of Z.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice of an opportunity to enroll)
that continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than October 1,
2010.
Example 3. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that D did not drop
coverage. Instead, D switched to a lower-cost
benefit package option.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll in any
benefit package available to similarly situated
individuals who enroll when first eligible.
Example 4. (i) Facts. Same facts as
Example 2, except that E elected COBRA
continuation coverage.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 4, not later
than October 1, 2010, the plan must provide
D and E an opportunity to enroll other than
as a COBRA qualified beneficiary (and must
provide, by that date, written notice of the
opportunity to enroll) that continues for at
least 30 days, with enrollment effective not
later than October 1, 2010.
Example 5. (i) Facts. Employer X
maintains a group health plan with a
calendar year plan year. Prior to 2011, the
plan allows children of employees to be
covered under the plan until the child attains
age 22. During the 2009 plan year, an
individual with a 22-year old child joins the
plan; the child is denied coverage because
the child is 22.
(ii) Conclusion. In this Example 5,
notwithstanding that the child was not
previously covered under the plan, the plan
must provide the child, not later than January
1, 2011, an opportunity to enroll (including
written notice to the employee of an
opportunity to enroll the child) that
continues for at least 30 days, with
enrollment effective not later than January 1,
2011.
(g) Special rule for grandfathered
group health plans—(1) For plan years
beginning before January 1, 2014, a
group health plan that qualifies as a
grandfathered health plan under section
1251 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act and that makes
available dependent coverage of
children may exclude an adult child
who has not attained age 26 from
coverage only if the adult child is
eligible to enroll in an eligible
employer-sponsored health plan (as
defined in section 5000A(f)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code) other than a
group health plan of a parent.
(2) For plan years beginning on or
after January 1, 2014, a group health
plan that qualifies as a grandfathered
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27140
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES2
health plan under section 1251 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act must comply with the requirements
of paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section.
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Jkt 220001
(h) Applicability date. The provisions
of this section apply for plan years (in
the individual market, policy years)
PO 00000
beginning on or after September 23,
2010.
[FR Doc. 2010–11391 Filed 5–10–10; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P; 4510–29–P; 4120–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 92 (Thursday, May 13, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 27122-27140]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-11391]
[[Page 27121]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part II
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 54 and 602
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Department of Labor
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Part 2590
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Department of Health and Human Services
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Group Health Plans and Health Insurance Issuers Relating to Dependent
Coverage of Children to Age 26 Under the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act; Interim Final Rule and Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 92 / Thursday, May 13, 2010 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 27122]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 54 and 602
[TD 9482]
RIN 1545-BJ46
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Part 2590
RIN 1210-AB41
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
[OCIIO-4150-IFC]
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
RIN 0991-AB66
Interim Final Rules for Group Health Plans and Health Insurance
Issuers Relating to Dependent Coverage of Children to Age 26 Under the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service, Department of the Treasury; Employee
Benefits Security Administration, Department of Labor; Department of
Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Interim final rules with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains interim final regulations implementing
the requirements for group health plans and health insurance issuers in
the group and individual markets under provisions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act regarding dependent coverage of
children who have not attained age 26.
DATES: Effective date. These interim final regulations are effective on
July 12, 2010.
Comment date. Comments are due on or before August 11, 2010.
Applicability date. These interim final regulations generally apply
to group health plans and group health insurance issuers for plan years
beginning on or after September 23, 2010. These interim final
regulations generally apply to individual health insurance issuers for
policy years beginning on or after September 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be submitted to any of the addresses
specified below. Any comment that is submitted to any Department will
be shared with the other Departments. Please do not submit duplicates.
All comments will be made available to the public. Warning: Do not
include any personally identifiable information (such as name, address,
or other contact information) or confidential business information that
you do not want publicly disclosed. All comments are posted on the
Internet exactly as received, and can be retrieved by most Internet
search engines. No deletions, modifications, or redactions will be made
to the comments received, as they are public records. Comments may be
submitted anonymously.
Department of Labor. Comments to the Department of Labor,
identified by RIN 1210-AB41, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: E-OHPSCA.EBSA@dol.gov.
Mail or Hand Delivery: Office of Health Plan Standards and
Compliance Assistance, Employee Benefits Security Administration, Room
N-5653, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210, Attention: RIN 1210-AB41.
Comments received by the Department of Labor will be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov and https://www.dol.gov/ebsa, and
available for public inspection at the Public Disclosure Room, N-1513,
Employee Benefits Security Administration, 200 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20210.
Department of Health and Human Services. In commenting, please
refer to file code OCIIO-4150-IFC. Because of staff and resource
limitations, we cannot accept comments by facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (please choose only one
of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this
regulation to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions under
the ``More Search Options'' tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address only: Office of Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: OCIIO-4150-IFC,
P.O. Box 8016, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments to
the following address only: Office of Consumer Information and
Insurance Oversight, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: OCIIO-4150-IFC, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments before the close of the comment period
to either of the following addresses:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC--
Office of Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, Department
of Health and Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building,
200 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201 (Because access to
the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey Building is not readily
available to persons without Federal government identification,
commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in the OCIIO drop
slots located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock is
available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing by stamping
in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being filed.).
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address,
please call (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your arrival with one
of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
Submission of comments on paperwork requirements. You may submit
comments on this document's paperwork requirements by following the
instructions at the end of the ``Collection of Information
Requirements'' section in this document.
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have been received: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the search instructions on that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately
three weeks after publication of a document, at the headquarters of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500 Security
[[Page 27123]]
Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday through Friday of each
week from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. EST. To schedule an appointment to view
public comments, phone 1-800-743-3951.
Internal Revenue Service. Comments to the IRS, identified by REG-
114494-10, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-114494-10), room 5205, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
Hand or courier delivery: Monday through Friday between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-114494-10),
Courier's Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington DC 20224.
All submissions to the IRS will be open to public inspection and
copying in room 1621, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amy Turner or Beth Baum, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, Department of Labor, at (202) 693-
8335; Karen Levin, Internal Revenue Service, Department of the
Treasury, at (202) 622-6080; Jim Mayhew, Office of Consumer Information
and Insurance Oversight, Department of Health and Human Services, at
(410) 786-1565.
Customer Service Information: Individuals interested in obtaining
information from the Department of Labor concerning employment-based
health coverage laws may call the EBSA Toll-Free Hotline at 1-866-444-
EBSA (3272) or visit the Department of Labor's Web site (https://www.dol.gov/ebsa). In addition, information from HHS on private health
insurance for consumers can be found on the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) Web site (https://www.cms.hhs.gov/HealthInsReformforConsume/01_Overview.asp).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the Affordable Care
Act), Public Law 111-148, was enacted on March 23, 2010; the Health
Care and Education Reconciliation Act (the Reconciliation Act), Public
Law 111-152, was enacted on March 30, 2010. The Affordable Care Act and
the Reconciliation Act reorganize, amend, and add to the provisions of
part A of title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
relating to group health plans and health insurance issuers in the
group and individual markets. The term ``group health plan'' includes
both insured and self-insured group health plans.\1\ The Affordable
Care Act adds section 715 to the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA) and section 9815 to the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) to
make the provisions of part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act applicable
under ERISA and the Code to group health plans, and health insurance
issuers providing health insurance coverage in connection with group
health plans, as if those provisions of the PHS Act were included in
ERISA and the Code. The PHS Act sections incorporated by this reference
are sections 2701 through 2728. PHS Act sections 2701 through 2719A are
substantially new, though they incorporate some provisions of prior
law. PHS Act sections 2722 through 2728 are sections of prior law
renumbered with some, mostly minor, changes. Section 1251 of the
Affordable Care Act, as modified by section 10103 of the Affordable
Care Act and section 2301 of the Reconciliation Act, specifies that
certain plans or coverage existing as of the date of enactment (i.e.,
grandfathered health plans) are subject to only certain provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The term ``group health plan'' is used in title XXVII of the
PHS Act, part 7 of ERISA, and chapter 100 of the Code, and is
distinct from the term ``health plan'', as used in other provisions
of title I of the Affordable Care Act. The term ``health plan'' does
not include self-insured group health plans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtitles A and C of title I of the Affordable Care Act amend the
requirements of title XXVII of the PHS Act (changes to which are
incorporated into ERISA section 715). The preemption provisions of
ERISA section 731 and PHS Act section 2724 \2\ (implemented in 29 CFR
2590.731(a) and 45 CFR 146.143(a)) apply so that the requirements of
the Affordable Care Act are not to be ``construed to supersede any
provision of State law which establishes, implements, or continues in
effect any standard or requirement solely relating to health insurance
issuers in connection with group or individual health insurance
coverage except to the extent that such standard or requirement
prevents the application of a requirement'' of the Affordable Care Act.
Accordingly, State laws that impose on health insurance issuers
stricter requirements than those imposed by the Affordable Care Act
will not be superseded by the Affordable Care Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Code section 9815 incorporates the preemption provisions of
PHS Act section 2724. Prior to the Affordable Care Act, there were
no express preemption provisions in chapter 100 of the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and the
Treasury (the Departments) expect to issue regulations implementing the
revised PHS Act sections 2701 through 2719A in several phases. The
first publication in this series was a Request for Information relating
to the medical loss ratio provisions of PHS Act section 2718, published
in the Federal Register on April 14, 2010 (75 FR 19297). These interim
final regulations are being published to implement PHS Act section 2714
(requiring dependent coverage of children to age 26). PHS Act section
2714 generally is effective for plan years (in the individual market,
policy years) beginning on or after September 23, 2010, which is six
months after the March 23, 2010 date of enactment of the Affordable
Care Act.\3\ The implementation of other provisions of PHS Act sections
2701 through 2719A and section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act will be
addressed in future regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See section 1004 of the Affordable Care Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because subtitles A and C of title I of the Affordable Care Act
contain requirements that are applicable to both the group and
individual health insurance markets, it would be duplicative to insert
the requirements into both the existing 45 CFR part 146 (Requirements
for the Group Health Insurance Market) and 45 CFR part 148
(Requirements for the Individual Health Insurance Market). Accordingly,
these interim final regulations create a new part 147 in subchapter B
of 45 CFR to implement the provisions of the Affordable Care Act. The
provisions of the Affordable Care Act, to the extent that they apply to
group health plans and group health insurance coverage, are also
implemented under new regulations added to 29 CFR part 2590 and 26 CFR
part 54.
II. Overview of the Regulations
A. PHS Act Section 2714, Continued Eligibility of Children Until Age 26
(26 CFR 54.9815-2714, 29 CFR 2590.715-2714, 45 CFR 147.120)
Section 2714 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act
(and amended by the Reconciliation Act), and these interim final
regulations provide that a plan or issuer that makes available
dependent coverage \4\ of children must make such coverage available
for children until attainment
[[Page 27124]]
of 26 years of age. The statute also requires the issuance of
regulations to ``define the dependents to which coverage shall be made
available'' under this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For purposes of these interim final regulations, dependent
coverage means coverage of any individual under the terms of a group
health plan, or group or individual health insurance coverage,
because of the relationship to a participant (in the individual
market, primary subscriber).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many group health plans that provide dependent coverage limit the
coverage to health coverage excludible from employees' gross income for
income tax purposes. Thus, dependent coverage is limited to employees'
spouses and employees' children that qualify as dependents for income
tax purposes. Consequently, these plans often condition dependent
coverage, in addition to the age of the child, on student status,
residency, and financial support or other factors indicating dependent
status. However, with the expansion of dependent coverage required by
the Affordable Care Act to children until age 26, conditioning coverage
on whether a child is a tax dependent or a student, or resides with or
receives financial support from the parent, is no longer appropriate in
light of the correlation between age and these factors. Therefore,
these interim final regulations do not allow plans or coverage to use
these requirements to deny dependent coverage to children. Because the
statute does not distinguish between coverage for minor children and
coverage for adult children under age 26, these factors also may not be
used to determine eligibility for dependent coverage for minor
children.
Accordingly, these interim final regulations clarify that, with
respect to children who have not attained age 26, a plan or issuer may
not define dependent for purposes of eligibility for dependent coverage
of children other than in terms of the relationship between the child
and the participant (in the individual market, the primary subscriber).
Examples of factors that cannot be used for defining dependent for
purposes of eligibility (or continued eligibility) include financial
dependency on the participant or primary subscriber (or any other
person), residency with the participant or primary subscriber (or any
other person), student status, employment, eligibility for other
coverage, or any combination of these. These interim final regulations
also provide that the terms of the plan or policy for dependent
coverage cannot vary based on the age of a child, except for children
age 26 or older. Examples illustrate that surcharges for coverage of
children under age 26 are not allowed except where the surcharges apply
regardless of the age of the child (up to age 26) and that, for
children under age 26, the plan cannot vary benefits based on the age
of the child. The Affordable Care Act, as originally enacted, required
plans and issuers to make dependent coverage available only to a child
``who is not married.'' This language was struck by section 2301(b) of
the Reconciliation Act. Accordingly, under these interim final
regulations, plans and issuers may not limit dependent coverage based
on whether a child is married. (However, a plan or issuer is not
required under these interim final regulations to cover the spouse of
an eligible child).
The statute and these interim final regulations provide that
nothing in PHS Act section 2714 requires a plan or issuer to make
available coverage for a child of a child receiving dependent coverage.
Under section 1004(d) of the Reconciliation Act and IRS Notice
2010-38 (released to the public on April 27, 2010 and scheduled to be
published in 2010-20 Internal Revenue Bulletin, May 17, 2010),
employers may exclude from the employee's income the value of any
employer-provided health coverage for an employee's child for the
entire taxable year the child turns 26 if the coverage continues until
the end of that taxable year. This means that if a child turns 26 in
March, but stays on the plan past December 31st (the end of most
people's taxable year), the health benefits up to December 31st can be
excluded for tax purposes.
Application to grandfathered health plans. Under the statute and
these interim final regulations, the requirement to make available
dependent coverage for children who have not attained age 26 generally
applies to all group health plans and health insurance issuers offering
group or individual health insurance coverage whether or not the plan
or health insurance coverage qualifies as a grandfathered health plan
\5\ under section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act, for plan years (in
the individual market, policy years) beginning on or after September
23, 2010. However, in accordance with section 2301(a) of the
Reconciliation Act, for plan years beginning before January 1, 2014,
these interim final regulations provide that a grandfathered health
plan that is a group health plan that makes available dependent
coverage of children may exclude an adult child who has not attained
age 26 from coverage only if the child is eligible to enroll in an
employer-sponsored health plan (as defined in section 5000A(f)(2) of
the Code) other than a group health plan of a parent. In the case of an
adult child who is eligible for coverage under the plans of the
employers of both parents, neither plan may exclude the adult child
from coverage based on the fact that the adult child is eligible to
enroll in the plan of the other parent's employer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act, as modified by
section 10103 of the Affordable Care Act and section 2301 of the
Reconciliation Act, specifies that certain plans or coverage
existing as of the March 23, 2010 date of enactment (i.e.,
grandfathered health plans) are subject to only certain provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulations relating to grandfathered health plans under section
1251 of the Affordable Care Act are expected to be published in the
very near future. The Departments anticipate that the regulations will
make clear that changes to plan or policy terms to comply with PHS Act
section 2714 and these interim final regulations, including voluntary
compliance before plan years (in the individual market, policy years)
beginning on or after September 23, 2010, will not cause a plan or
health insurance coverage to lose grandfathered health plan status for
any purpose under the Affordable Care Act, as amended.
Transitional Rule. Prior to the applicability date of PHS Act
section 2714, a child who was covered under a group health plan or
health insurance coverage as a dependent may have lost eligibility
under the plan (or coverage) due to age prior to age 26. Moreover, if,
when a parent first became eligible for coverage, a child was under age
26 but older than the age at which the plan (or coverage) stopped
covering children, the child would not have become eligible for the
plan (or coverage). When the provisions of section 2714 become
applicable, a plan or issuer can no longer exclude coverage for the
child prior to age 26 irrespective of whether or when that child was
enrolled in the plan (or coverage). Also, a child of a primary
subscriber with family coverage in the individual market may be
entitled to an opportunity to enroll if the child previously lost
coverage due to age while other family members retained the
coverage.\6\
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\6\ In the group market, section 9802(a) of the Code, section
702(a) of ERISA, and section 2705 of the PHS Act provide that a plan
or issuer cannot impose any rule for eligibility for benefits
(including any rule excluding coverage) based on a health factor,
including a preexisting condition. These rules were added by HIPAA
and generally became applicable for group health plans for plan
years beginning on or after July 1, 1997. Similar guidance regarding
re-enrollment rights for individuals previously denied coverage due
to a health factor was issued by the Departments of the Treasury,
Labor, and HHS on December 29, 1997, at 62 FR 67689 and on January
8, 2001 at 66 FR 1378, 1403, 1410, 1418.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, these interim final regulations provide transitional
relief for a child whose coverage ended, or who was denied coverage (or
was not
[[Page 27125]]
eligible for coverage) under a group health plan or health insurance
coverage because, under the terms of the plan or coverage, the
availability of dependent coverage of children ended before the
attainment of age 26.
These interim final regulations require a plan or issuer to give
such a child an opportunity to enroll that continues for at least 30
days (including written notice of the opportunity to enroll),
regardless of whether the plan or coverage offers an open enrollment
period and regardless of when any open enrollment period might
otherwise occur. This enrollment opportunity (including the written
notice) must be provided not later than the first day of the first plan
year (in the individual market, policy year) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010. Thus, many plans can use their existing annual
enrollment periods (which commonly begin and end before the start of
the plan year) to satisfy the enrollment opportunity requirement. If
the child is enrolled, coverage must begin not later than the first day
of the first plan year (in the individual market, policy year)
beginning on or after September 23, 2010, even if the request for
enrollment is made after the first day of the plan year. In subsequent
years, dependent coverage may be elected for an eligible child in
connection with normal enrollment opportunities under the plan or
coverage.
Under these interim final regulations, the notice may be provided
to an employee on behalf of the employee's child (in the individual
market, to a primary subscriber on behalf of the primary subscriber's
child). In addition, for a group health plan or group health insurance
coverage, the notice may be included with other enrollment materials
that a plan distributes to employees, provided the statement is
prominent. For a group health plan or group health insurance coverage,
if a notice satisfying these requirements is provided to an employee
whose child is entitled to an enrollment opportunity, the obligation to
provide the notice of enrollment opportunity with respect to that child
is satisfied for both the plan and the issuer.
Any child enrolling in group health plan coverage pursuant to this
enrollment right must be treated as a special enrollee, as provided
under the regulations interpreting the HIPAA portability provisions.\7\
Accordingly, the child must be offered all the benefit packages
available to similarly situated individuals who did not lose coverage
by reason of cessation of dependent status. The child also cannot be
required to pay more for coverage than similarly situated individuals
who did not lose coverage by reason of cessation of dependent status.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ HIPAA is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191). Regulations regarding the
treatment of HIPAA special enrollees are included at 26 CFR 54.9801-
6(d), 29 CFR 2590.701-6(d), and 45 CFR 146.117(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Departments have been informed that many health insurance
issuers have announced that they will allow continued coverage of adult
children before such coverage is required by the Affordable Care Act. A
plan or issuer that allows continued coverage of adult children before
being required to do so by the Affordable Care Act is not required to
provide the enrollment opportunity with respect to children who do not
lose coverage.
Examples in these interim final regulations illustrate the
application of these transitional rules. One example illustrates that,
if a child qualifies for an enrollment opportunity under this section
and the parent is not enrolled but is otherwise eligible for
enrollment, the plan must provide an opportunity to enroll the parent,
in addition to the child. Similarly, another example illustrates that,
if a plan has more than one benefit package option, a child qualifies
for enrollment under this section, and the parent is enrolled in one
benefit package option, the plan must provide an opportunity to enroll
the child in any benefit package option for which the child is
otherwise eligible (thus allowing the parent to switch benefit package
options). Another example illustrates that a child who qualifies for an
enrollment opportunity under this section and who is covered under a
COBRA continuation provision must be given the opportunity to enroll as
a dependent of an active employee (i.e., other than as a COBRA-
qualified beneficiary). In this situation, if the child loses
eligibility for coverage due to a qualifying event (including aging out
of coverage at age 26), the child has another opportunity to elect
COBRA continuation coverage. (If the qualifying event is aging out, the
COBRA continuation coverage could last 36 months from the loss of
eligibility that relates to turning age 26.) The final example in this
section illustrates that an employee who joined a plan prior to the
applicability date of PHS Act section 2714, and has a child who never
enrolled because the child was too old under the terms of the plan but
has not yet turned 26, must be provided an opportunity to enroll the
child under this section even though the child was not previously
covered under the plan. If the parent is no longer eligible for
coverage under the plan (for example, if the parent has ceased
employment with the plan sponsor) as of the first date on which the
enrollment opportunity would be required to be given, the plan would
not be required to enroll the child.
B. Conforming Changes Under the PHS Act
1. References to the Public Health Service Act
Conforming changes to references to sections of title XXVII of the
PHS Act are made throughout parts 144 and 146 of title 45 of the Code
of Federal Regulations to reflect the renumbering of certain sections
by the Affordable Care Act.
2. Definitions (45 CFR 144.103)
These interim final regulations define ``policy year'' as the 12-
month period that is designated in the policy documents of individual
health insurance coverage. If the policy document does not designate a
policy year (or no such document is available), then the policy year is
the deductible or limit year used under the coverage. If deductibles or
other limits are not imposed on a yearly basis, the policy year is the
calendar year. The Affordable Care Act uses the term ``plan year'' in
referring to the period of coverage in both the individual and group
health insurance markets. The term ``plan year'', however, is generally
used in the group health insurance market. Accordingly, these interim
final regulations substitute the term ``policy year'' for ``plan year''
in defining the period of coverage in the individual health insurance
market.
III. Interim Final Regulations and Request for Comments
Section 9833 of the Code, section 734 of ERISA, and section 2792 of
the PHS Act authorize the Secretaries of the Treasury, Labor, and HHS
(collectively, the Secretaries) to promulgate any interim final rules
that they determine are appropriate to carry out the provisions of
chapter 100 of the Code, part 7 of subtitle B of title I of ERISA, and
part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act, which include PHS Act sections
2701 through 2728 and the incorporation of those sections into ERISA
section 715 and Code section 9815.
In addition, under Section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) a general notice of proposed
rulemaking is not required when an agency, for good cause, finds that
notice and public comment thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest. The
[[Page 27126]]
provisions of the APA that ordinarily require a notice of proposed
rulemaking do not apply here because of the specific authority granted
by section 9833 of the Code, section 734 of ERISA, and section 2792 of
the PHS Act. However, even if the APA was applicable, the Secretaries
have determined that it would be impracticable and contrary to the
public interest to delay putting the provisions in these interim final
regulations in place until a full public notice and comment process is
completed. The statutory requirement implemented in these interim final
regulations was enacted on March 23, 2010, and applies for plan years
(in the individual market, policy years) beginning on or after
September 23, 2010. Having a binding rule in effect is critical to
ensuring that individuals entitled to the new protections being
implemented have these protections uniformly applied.
Moreover, the provisions in these interim final regulations require
lead time for implementation. These interim final regulations require
that an enrollment period be provided no later than the first day the
obligation to allow dependent children to enroll until attainment of
age 26 takes effect. Preparations presumably would have to be made to
put such an enrollment process in place. Group health plans and health
insurance issuers also would have to take the cost associated with this
new obligation into account in establishing their premiums, and in
making other changes to the designs of plan or policy benefits, and any
such premiums and changes would have to receive necessary approvals in
advance of the plan or policy year in question.
For the foregoing reasons, the Departments have determined that it
is essential to provide certainty about what will be required of group
health plans and health insurance issuers under the statutory
requirements implemented in binding regulations as far in advance of
September 23, 2010 as possible. This makes it impracticable to engage
in full notice and comment rulemaking before putting regulations into
effect, and in the public interest to do so through interim final
regulations under which the public will have an opportunity for
comment, but that opportunity will not delay putting rules in effect (a
delay that could possibly last past September 23, 2010).
Issuance of proposed regulations would not be sufficient because
the proposed regulations would not be binding, and different group
health plans or health insurance issuers could interpret the statutory
language in different ways. Had the Departments published a notice of
proposed rulemaking, provided for a 60-day comment period, and only
then prepared final regulations, which would be subject to a 60-day
delay in effective date, it is unlikely that it would have been
possible to have final regulations in effect before late September,
when these requirements could be in effect for some plans or policies.
It therefore is in the public interest that these interim final
regulations be in effect and apply when the statutory protections being
implemented apply.
IV. Economic Impact and Paperwork Burden
A. Summary--Department of Labor and Department of Health and Human
Services
As stated earlier in this preamble, these interim final regulations
implement PHS Act section 2714, which requires plans or issuers that
make dependent coverage available for children to continue to make such
coverage available for an adult child until the attainment of age 26.
The regulation also provides an enrollment opportunity to individuals
who lost or were not eligible for dependent coverage before age 26.\8\
This provision generally is effective for plan years (in the individual
market, policy years) beginning on or after September 23, 2010, which
is six months after the March 23, 2010 date of enactment of the
Affordable Care Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The Affordable Care Act adds section 715 and Code section to
make the provisions of part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act
applicable to group health plans, and health insurance issuers
providing health insurance coverage in connection with group health
plans, under ERISA and the Code as if those provisions of the PHS
Act were included in ERISA and the Code. The PHS Act sections
incorporated by this reference are sections 2701 through 2728.
Section 1251 of the Affordable Care Act provides rules for
grandfathered health plans, and these rules are further clarified in
section 10103 of the Affordable Care Act and section 2301 of the
Reconciliation Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Departments have crafted these interim final regulations to
secure the protections intended by Congress in the most economically
efficient manner possible. The Departments have quantified costs where
possible and provided a qualitative discussion of the economic benefits
and some of the transfers and costs that may stem from these interim
final regulations.
B. Executive Order 12866--Department of Labor and Department of Health
and Human Services
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735), this regulatory action
has been determined ``significant'' and therefore subject to review by
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of the
Executive Order defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an
action that is likely to result in a rule (1) having an annual effect
on the economy of $100 million or more in any one year, or adversely
and materially affecting a sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State,
local or tribal governments or communities (also referred to as
``economically significant''); (2) creating a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned by another
agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy issues arising
out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles
set forth in the Executive Order. OMB has determined that this
regulation is economically significant within the meaning of section
3(f)(1) of the Executive Order, because it is likely to have an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million in any one year. Accordingly, OMB
has reviewed these rules pursuant to the Executive Order. The
Departments provide an assessment of the potential costs, benefits, and
transfers associated with the regulatory provision below. The
Departments invite comments on this assessment and its conclusions.
1. Need for Regulatory Action
PHS Act section 2714, as added by the Affordable Care Act and
amended by the Reconciliation Act requires group health plans and
health insurance issuers offering group or individual health insurance
coverage that make dependent coverage available for children to
continue to make coverage available to such children until the
attainment of age 26. With respect to a child receiving dependent
coverage, coverage does not have to be extended to a child or children
of the child or a spouse of the child. In addition, as provided by the
Reconciliation Act, grandfathered group health plans are not required
to offer dependent coverage to a child under 26 who is otherwise
eligible for employer-sponsored insurance other than a group health
plan of a parent for plan years beginning before January 1, 2014. PHS
Act section 2714 generally is effective for plan years (in the
individual market, policy years) beginning on or after September 23,
2010. Thus, these interim final regulations are necessary to amend the
Departments' existing regulations to
[[Page 27127]]
implement these statutorily mandated changes.
2. Summary of Impacts
In this section, the Departments estimate the number of individuals
affected by these interim final regulations, and the impact of the
regulations on health insurance premiums in the group and individual
markets. Beginning with the population of individuals age 19-25, the
number of individuals potentially affected is estimated by applying
several criteria including whether their parents have existing
employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) or an individual market policy; and
whether the individuals are themselves uninsured, have ESI, individual
market policies or other forms of coverage. A range of assumptions
concerning the percentage of the potentially affected individuals that
will accept the offer of new dependent coverage--``take-up'' rates-- is
then applied to estimate the number of newly covered individuals. The
premium impact is calculated by using an estimated incremental
insurance cost per newly-covered individual as a percent of average
family premiums.
In accordance, with OMB Circular A-4,\9\ Table 1 below depicts an
accounting statement showing the Departments' assessment of the
benefits, costs, and transfers associated with this regulatory action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
Table 1--Accounting Table
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits:
Annualized Quantified: low estimate.................... 0.19 million previously uninsured individuals gain
coverage in 2011.
mid-range estimate..................................... 0.65 million previously uninsured individuals gain
coverage in 2011.
high estimate.......................................... 1.64 million previously uninsured individuals gain
coverage in 2011.
Qualitative: Expanding coverage options of the 19-25 population should decrease the number uninsured, which in
turn should decrease the cost-shifting of uncompensated care onto those with insurance, increase the receipt of
preventive health care and provide more timely access to high quality care, resulting in a healthier
population. Allowing extended dependent coverage will also permit greater job mobility for this population as
their insurance coverage will no longer be tied to their own jobs or student status. Dependents aged 19-25 that
have chronic or other serious health conditions would still be able to continue their current coverage through
a parent's plan. To the extent there is an increase in beneficial utilization of healthcare, health could
improve.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discount Period
Costs\10\ Low Mid-range High Year rate covered
estimate estimate estimate dollar percent \11\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized ($millions/ 11.2 11.2 11.2 2010 7 2011-2013
year)............................
10.4 10.4 10.4 2010 3 2011-2013
A one-time notice of right to enroll must be sent to those affected.
Qualitative: To the extent additional coverage increases utilization of health care services, there will be
additional costs incurred to achieve the health benefits.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfer: \12\
Annualized Monetized 3,459.3 5,250.2 6,893.9 2010 7 2011-2013
($millions/year).............
3,482.5 5,274.5 6,895.4 2010 3 2011-2013
Qualitative: If the rule causes family health insurance premiums to increase, there will be a transfer from
individuals with family health insurance coverage who do not have dependents aged 19-25 to those individuals
with family health insurance coverage that have dependents aged 19-25. To the extent that these higher premiums
result in lower profits or higher prices for the employer's product, then the higher premiums will result in a
transfer either from stockholders or consumers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The cost estimates are annualize across the years 2011-2013, and reflects a single point estimate of the
cost to send out a notice in the first year only.
\11\ The Departments limited the period covered by the RIA to 2011-2013, because it only has reliable data to
make projections over this period due to the fact that in 2014, things will change drastically when the
subsidies and tax credits to offset premium increases and the exchanges are in effect.
\12\ The estimates in this table reflect the annualized discounted value in 2010 of the additional premium costs
for family policies calculated as the product of the newly covered dependents in each year from 2011-2013 (see
below) and an incremental cost per newly-covered person in those years (see below).
3. Estimated Number of Affected Individuals
The Departments' estimates in this section are based on the 2004-
2006 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component (MEPS-HC)
which was projected and calibrated to 2010 to be consistent with the
National Health Accounts projections. The Departments estimate that in
2010, there are approximately 29.5 million individuals aged 19-25
(young adults) in the United States. Of those individuals, 9.3 million
young adults (of whom 3.1 million are uninsured) do not have a parent
who has either ESI or non-group insurance, and thus they have no access
to dependent coverage. As shown in Table 2, among the remaining 20.2
million young adults whose parents are covered either by ESI or by non-
group insurance:
3.44 million are currently uninsured,
2.42 million are covered by their own non-group insurance,
5.55 million are covered by their own ESI,
5.73 million are already on their parent's or spouse's
ESI, and
3.01 million have some other form of coverage such as
Medicaid or TRICARE.
[[Page 27128]]
Table 2--Young Adults Aged 19-25 by Insurance Status
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESI as a
Uninsured* Non-group Own ESI dependent Other Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total U.S. Population Aged 19-25.. 6.59 2.69 6.98 5.75 7.5 29.5
All Young Adults in U.S. with a Parent with a Policy by Young Adult Insurance Status
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parents have ESI.................. 3.28 2.03 5.32 5.73 2.91 19.27
Parents have non-group............ 0.16 0.40 0.23 ........... 0.10 0.88
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal A.................... 3.44 2.42 5.55 5.73 3.01 20.15
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*The bolded numbers are potentially affected by the regulation.
Source: MEPS 2004-2006 HC Surveys, controlled to 2010 consistent with the National Health Accounts. Note: Total
number of young adults, age 19-25 is 29.5 million; the 20.15 million in this Table are the subset whose
parents have either ESI or non-group coverage.
Initially, the subset of this group of young adults that will be
affected by these interim final regulations are those who are either
uninsured (3.44 million) or covered by individual coverage (2.42
million). The statute does not require grandfathered group health plans
to offer coverage to young adults who currently have their own ESI or
an offer of an ESI. For the purposes of this analysis, it is assumed
that all plans begin 2011 with grandfathered status. These impacts
could change if plans lose their Grandfathered status.
Of these 5.86 million young adults, as shown in Table 3, 3.49
million are also unlikely to switch to their parents' coverage because:
They are already allowed to enroll in extended dependent
coverage for young adults through their State's existing laws, but have
chosen not to (2.61 million). Thirty-seven states already have
requirements concerning dependent coverage in the group market,
although most of these are substantially more restrictive than those
contained in this regulation.\13\ Using information about State laws
obtained from the Kaiser Family Foundation,\14\ a State by State
profile of State required coverage based on a person's State of
residence, age, student status, and living situation was developed.
This profile was then overlaid on MEPS data to obtain an estimate of
the number of individuals that would newly become eligible for coverage
due to these interim final regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Restrictions include requirements for financial dependency,
student status, and age limits.
\14\ As described in Kaiser Family Foundation, Definition of
Dependency by Age, 2010, KFF State Health Facts, at https://www.statehealthfacts.org/comparetable.jsp?ind=601&cat=7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
They have an offer of ESI and have parents who are covered
by ESI (0.48 million). For the purposes of this regulatory impact
statement, the Departments assume that the parents of these young
adults will be in grandfathered group health plans, and thus that these
young adults will not be affected by the provisions of these interim
final regulations. To the extent that some of the coverage in which
these parents are enrolled is not grandfathered, the effect of these
interim final regulations will be larger than the estimates provided
here.
Finally, there are 0.40 million young adults who have non-
group coverage and whose parents have non-group coverage. Because the
parents' non-group coverage is underwritten, there is not likely to be
any financial benefit to the family in moving the young adult onto the
parents' coverage, and the Departments assume that these young adults
will not be affected by the regulation.
TABLE 3--``Uninsured'' and ``Non-group'' Young Adults Unlikely to be
Affected by Extending Dependent Coverage to Age 26
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Group
Uninsured coverage Total
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Young adults potentially 1.30 1.31 2.61
covered by parent ESI due to
state law.......................
(2) Young adults with an offer of 0.31 0.17 0.48
ESI whose parents have ESI......
(3) Young adults with non-group ........... 0.40 0.40
coverage whose parents have non-
group coverage..................
--------------------------------------
Subtotal B................... 1.61 1.88 3.49
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in Table 4, this leaves approximately 2.37 million young
adults who might be affected by this provision, or approximately eight
percent of the 29.5 million young adults in the age group. Among the
approximately 2.37 million young adults who are estimated to be
potentially affected by this provision, approximately 1.83 million are
currently uninsured, and 0.55 million are currently covered by their
own non-group coverage.
TABLE 4--Young Adults Potentially Affected by Extending Dependent
Coverage to Age 26
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-group
Uninsured coverage Total
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parents have ESI................. 1.67 0.55 2.21
Parents have non-group........... 0.16 ........... 0.16
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Total (Subtotal A-Subtotal 1.83 0.55 2.37
B)*.........................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: MEPS 2004-2006 HC Surveys, controlled to 2010 consistent with
projections of the National Health Accounts.
*Subtotal A is in Table 2 and Subtotal B is in Table 3.
It is difficult to estimate precisely what fraction of the 2.37
million young adults who might potentially be affected by the provision
will actually enroll on their parents' coverage. A study by Monheit and
Cantor of the early experience in States that have extended coverage to
dependents suggests that few uninsured children in these States shift
to their parents' policy.\15\ However, data and methodological
difficulties inevitably lead to substantial uncertainty about the
finding.
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\15\ Monheit, A., J. Cantor, et al, ``State Policies Expanding
Dependent Coverage to Young Adults in Private Health Insurance
Plans,'' presented at the Academy Health State Health Research and
Policy Interest Group Meeting, Chicago IL, June 27, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Departments considered two other points of reference to
estimate take-up rates. One is the work that has analyzed take-up rates
among people made newly eligible for public coverage by Medicaid
expansions. These studies suggest take-up rates in the range of 10-34
percent.\16\ However, the populations eligible for these expansions
have different socio-demographic compositions than those eligible for
the dependent coverage provisions covered under these interim final
regulations, and the decision to take-up Medicaid is clearly different
than the decision to cover a child on a parent's private insurance
policy. A second point of reference are estimates from the Kaiser/HRET
Employer Health benefits Survey \17\ which suggest that, depending on
the size of the worker contribution, between 77 percent and 90 percent
of employees accept offers of family policies. Again, these estimates
would be based on a group that differs in characteristics from those
eligible for new dependent coverage. These concerns notwithstanding,
the analyses of Medicaid expansions and employee take-up of employer
sponsored coverage provide useful points of reference.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Bansak, Cynthia and Steven Raphael. ``The Effects of State
Policy Design Features on Take-Up and Crowd-out Rates fro the State
Children's Health Insurance Program.'' Journal of Policy Analysis
and Management, Vol. 26, No. 1, 149-175. 2006. Find that for the
time period 1998-2002 take-up rates for SCHIP were about 10 percent.
Currie, Janet and Jonathan Gruber. ``Saving babies: The Efficacy
and Cost of Recent Changes in Medicaid Eligibility of Pregnant
Women.'' The Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 104, No. 6, Dec.
1996, pp. 1263-1296. Find for Medicaid expansions during the 1979-
1992 period the take-up rate for eligible pregnant women was 34
percent.
Cutler, David and Jonathan Gruber. ``Does Public Insurance Crowd
Out Private Insurance?'' The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol.
111, No. 2, May 1996, pp. 391-430. Find that for the Medicaid
expansions from 1987-1992 the take-up rate for the uninsured is
close to 30 percent, while for pregnant women it was seven percent.
Gruber, Jonathan and Kosali Simon. ``Crowd-Out Ten years Later:
Have Recent Public Insurance Expansions Crowded Out Private Health
Insurance?'' NBER Working Paper 12858. January 2007. Find that for
the Medicaid expansions during 1996-2002 the take-up rate was 7
percent across all children, but nearly one-third for uninsured
children.
\17\ Found at https://www.kff.org/insurance/snapshot/chcm020707oth.cfm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recognizing the uncertainty in the area, the Departments produced a
range of assumptions concerning take-up rates. In developing the range
of take-up rates, the Departments assume that these rates will vary by
the following factors: (1) The young adult's current health coverage
status (uninsured young adults are less likely to take advantage of the
dependent coverage option than young adults already covered by non-
group insurance, because young adults who have purchased non-group
insurance have shown a strong preference for coverage, and can almost
always save money and get better coverage by switching to their
parents' policy); (2) the young adult's health status (young adults in
fair or poor health are more likely to take advantage of the option
than those in excellent, very good or good health), and (3) the young
adult's living situation (those living with their parents are more
likely to take up the option than those not living with their parents).
The almost fully covered or ``high'' take-up rate scenario assumes
that regardless of health or insurance status, 95 percent of young
adults living at home and 85 percent of those not living at home would
move to dependent coverage. For the mid-range scenario, the Departments
assume that relative to the high take-up rate scenario, 90 percent of
the uninsured whose health status was fair or poor health and 50
percent of those in good to excellent health would move to dependent
coverage. In the low take-up rate scenario, the Departments adjusted
the percentages to 80 percent and 10 percent of the high take-up rate
scenario. In all three scenarios, the same assumptions apply to
individuals with non-group policies whose parents have ESI--95 percent
of those living at home and 85 percent of those living elsewhere would
move to dependent coverage.
In the low take-up rate scenario, the assumptions lead to the
result that approximately 30 percent of eligibles will enroll in
dependent coverage. In the mid-range scenario, they result in an
approximate 50 percent take-up rate, and in the high take-up scenario,
they result in an approximate 90 percent take-up rate. The Departments
are uncertain regarding which of these scenarios is most likely but are
confident that they bracket the expected outcome.
Table 5--Number of Individuals with New Dependent Coverage and Impact on Group Insurance Premiums, 2011-2013
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low estimate Mid-range estimate High estimate
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011 2012 2013 2011 2012 2013 2011 2012 2013
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Individuals with New Dependent 0.68 0.97 1.08 1.24 1.60 1.65 2.12 2.07 1.98
Coverage (millions)...........
From Uninsured (millions)...... 0.19 0.29 0.33 0.65 0.94 0.91 1.64 1.42 1.21
Incremental Premium Cost Per $3,670 $3,800 $4,000 $3,380 $3,500 $3,690 $3,220 $3,340 $3,510
Individual Coverage...........
Impact on Group Insurance 0.5 0.7 0.7 0.7 1.0 1.0 1.2 1.2 1.1
Premiums (%)..................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 27130]]
These take-up rate assumptions are then applied to the number of
potentially affected individuals displayed in Table 3. The resulting
number of individuals with new dependent coverage is summarized in
Table 5. Under the mid-range take-up rate assumption, the Departments
estimate that in 2011, 1.24 million young adults will newly be covered
by their parents' ESI or non-group market policies, of whom 0.65
million were previously uninsured, and 0.6 million were previously
covered by non-group coverage. The number of individuals newly covered
by their parents' plans would be 0.7 and 2.12 million under the high
and low take-up rate assumptions respectively, with 0.2 and 1.64
million of these individuals being previously uninsured. Relative to
the individuals covered under the high take-up rate assumption, higher
proportions of the low- and mid-range assumption groups are accounted
for by people who previously had non-group coverage (72 percent and 48
percent respectively in contrast to 23 percent for the high take-up
rate group). This difference is a result of the Departments' assumption
for the low- and mid-range take-up rates that people with non-group
coverage will be more likely than healthy people who were uninsured to
take advantage of the dependent coverage option.
Under the mid-range take-up rate assumptions, the estimated number
of young adults covered by their parents' plans in 2012 increases
somewhat over the 2011 estimate to 1.6 million in total, of whom
approximately 0.9 million would have been uninsured. The increase in
the estimate for 2012 results from the assumption that as children
reach the age that would have caused them to be excluded from their
parents' policy before the implementation of these interim final
regulations, a large fraction of them now will remain on their parents'
policy. Similarly, the estimated number of young adults enrolling in
their parents' non-group policy increases from just under 75,000 in
2011 to approximately 100,000 in 2012, and 120,000 in 2013.
4. Benefits
The benefits of these interim final regulations are expected to
outweigh the costs to the regulated community. In the mid-range take-up
rate assumption, the Departments estimate that in 2011, 0.65 million
previously uninsured individuals will now be covered on their parent's
policies due to these interim final regulations and 1.24 million
individuals total will now be covered on their parent's coverage.
Expanding coverage options for the 19-25 population should decrease the
number uninsured, which in turn should decrease the cost-shifting of
uncompensated care onto those with coverage, increase the receipt of
preventive health care and provide more timely access to high quality
care, resulting in a healthier population. In particular, children with
chronic conditions or other serious health issues will be able to
continue coverage through a parent's plan until age 26. Allowing
extended dependent coverage also will permit greater job mobility for
this population as their health coverage will no longer be tied to
their own jobs or student status.
5. Costs and Transfers Associated With the Ru